I am pleased to announce release 2010.2 of SfePy.
Description
---
SfePy (simple finite elements in Python) is a software for solving
systems of coupled partial differential equations by the finite
element method. The code is based on NumPy and SciPy packages. It is
distributed under the
On May 9, 10:08 am, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
On 9 Mai, 09:05, Carl Banks pavlovevide...@gmail.com wrote:
Bottom line is, GPL hurts everyone: the companies and open source
community. Unless you're one of a handful of projects with sufficient
leverage, or are indeed a petty
dasacc22, 08.05.2010 19:19:
This is a simple question. I'm looking for the fastest way to
calculate the leading whitespace (as a string, ie '').
Here is an (untested) Cython 0.13 solution:
from cpython.unicode cimport Py_UNICODE_ISSPACE
def leading_whitespace(unicode ustring):
Stefan Behnel, 10.05.2010 08:54:
dasacc22, 08.05.2010 19:19:
This is a simple question. I'm looking for the fastest way to
calculate the leading whitespace (as a string, ie ' ').
Here is an (untested) Cython 0.13 solution:
from cpython.unicode cimport Py_UNICODE_ISSPACE
def
On 9 Mag, 11:20, superpollo ute...@esempio.net wrote:
if a b c are digits, solve ab:c=a*c+b
solved in one minute with no thought:
for a in range(10):
for b in range(10):
for c in range(10):
try:
if (10.*a+b)/c==a*c+b:
print
Hello
I am trying to find if there is a string OR list function that will
search a list of strings for all the strings that start with 'a'
return a new list containing all the strings that started with 'a'.
I have had a search of Python site I could not find what I am
looking for, does a
Have I missed something, or wouldn't this work just as well:
list_of_strings = ['2', 'awes', '3465sdg', 'dbsdf', 'asdgas']
[word for word in list_of_strings if word[0] == 'a']
['awes', 'asdgas']
Cheers,
Xav
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:40 PM, Jimbo nill...@yahoo.com wrote:
Hello
I am trying
Jimbo ha scritto:
Hello
I am trying to find if there is a string OR list function that will
search a list of strings for all the strings that start with 'a'
return a new list containing all the strings that started with 'a'.
I have had a search of Python site I could not find what I am
Stefan Behnel wrote:
j vickroy, 07.05.2010 20:44:
I apologize if this is not the appropriate forum for a question about
Hudson (http://hudson-ci.org/), but I did not know where else to ask and
my web searches have not been fruitful.
Certainly nice to read something about Hudson in this forum,
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On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:50 PM, Xavier Ho cont...@xavierho.com wrote:
Have I missed something, or wouldn't this work just as well:
list_of_strings = ['2', 'awes', '3465sdg', 'dbsdf', 'asdgas']
[word for word in list_of_strings if word[0] == 'a']
['awes', 'asdgas']
I would do this for
superpollo ha scritto:
Jimbo ha scritto:
Hello
I am trying to find if there is a string OR list function that will
search a list of strings for all the strings that start with 'a'
return a new list containing all the strings that started with 'a'.
I have had a search of Python site I could
Ben Cohen wrote:
Apologies for the TABs -- I wrote that example for demonstration purposes in my
mail client -- I'll copy and paste from a real code editor in the future.
Ben
There's nothing to apologies for. Be wary of those trying to get you out
of the right path, they will lie to you
On 10 Mai, 03:09, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 9, 6:39 pm, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
but if they aren't pitching it directly at you, why would you believe
that they are trying to change your behaviour?
Because I've seen people specifically state that their
ben wrote:
Ok, thanks for the info.
What would be a better way to do this? What I'm trying to do is treat
things in a reasonable OOP manner (all fairly new to me, esp. in
Python). Here's a made-up example with a little more context. Let's
say you're making a drawing program that can draw
Oltmans wrote:
On May 9, 1:53 am, superpollo ute...@esempio.net wrote:
add = lambda a,b: a+b
for i in reduce(add,a):
print i
This is very neat. Thank you. Sounds like magic to me. Can you please
explain how does that work? Many thanks again.
shorter nicer IMO.
Those
On Mar 23, 4:55 pm, Jose Manuel jfernan...@gmail.com wrote:
I have been learning Python, and it is amazing I am using the
tutorial that comes with the official distribution.
At the end my goal is to develop applied mathematic in engineering
applications to be published on the Web,
Dear Friends,
Is Python a functional programming language?
Is this a paradigm that is well supported by both the language syntax and the
general programming APIs?
I heard that lambdas were limited to a single expression, and that other
functional features were slated for removal in Python
hi,
can some one explain why the __first__ test is not being run?
#!/usr/bin/env python
import unittest # {{{
class T1TestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
pass # can we use global variables here?
def tearDown(self):
pass # garbage collection
def
On 10 Mai, 08:31, Carl Banks pavlovevide...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 9, 10:08 am, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
Oh sure: the GPL hurts everyone, like all the companies who have made
quite a lot of money out of effectively making Linux the new
enterprise successor to Unix, plus all
Just upgraded on my Windows 7 machine my copy of 2.6.4 to 2.6.5.
However doing sys.version still shows 2.6.4 even so python.exe is dated
19. March 2010 with a size of 26.624 bytes.
Is this a known issue? Or did I do something wrong?
If I install to a new folder all is well, but I would have
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 8:38 AM, John Maclean jaye...@gmail.com wrote:
hi,
can some one explain why the __first__ test is not being run?
It looks like you defined test_T1 inside of the tearDown method.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Samuel Williams, 10.05.2010 14:24:
Is Python a functional programming language?
No. Python is a multi-paradigm language. But it does have functions (and
methods) as first-class objects.
Is this a paradigm that is well supported by both the language syntax
and the general programming APIs?
Samuel Williams a écrit :
Dear Friends,
Is Python a functional programming language?
Depends on your definition of functional programming language, but
well, not really. It's mostly an imperative, object-oriented (but not
pure-object) language. It has some restricted support for some
Stefan Behnel wrote:
j vickroy, 07.05.2010 20:44:
I apologize if this is not the appropriate forum for a question about
Hudson (http://hudson-ci.org/), but I did not know where else to ask and
my web searches have not been fruitful.
Certainly nice to read something about Hudson in this forum,
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Stefan Behnel wrote:
j vickroy, 07.05.2010 20:44:
I apologize if this is not the appropriate forum for a question about
Hudson (http://hudson-ci.org/), but I did not know where else to ask and
my web searches have not been fruitful.
Certainly nice to read
My guess is you mixed tabs and spaces. One tab is always treated by the
python interpreter as being equal to eight spaces, which is two
indentation levels in your code.
Though if it were exactly as you show it, you'd be getting a syntax
error, because even there, it looks like the indentation of
Hi to all, i want to ask you a question, concerning the best way to do
the following as a POST request:
There is server-servlet that accepts xml commands
It had the following HTTP request headers:
Host: somehost.com
User-Agent: Jakarta Commons-HttpClient
Hi,
just a small question. Is it possible to change the refcount of a
reference manually? For debugging / ...
Thanks!
moerchendiser2k3
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
moerchendiser2k3 wrote:
Hi,
just a small question. Is it possible to change the refcount of a
reference manually? For debugging / ...
Thanks!
moerchendiser2k3
Why don't you just create a global reference to the object ? Unless this
one is removed, the object will be kept in memory.
JM
On 10/05/2010 14:38, J. Cliff Dyer wrote:
My guess is you mixed tabs and spaces. One tab is always treated by the
python interpreter as being equal to eight spaces, which is two
indentation levels in your code.
Though if it were exactly as you show it, you'd be getting a syntax
error, because
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 7:30 PM, kak...@gmail.com kak...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi to all, i want to ask you a question, concerning the best way to do
the following as a POST request:
There is server-servlet that accepts xml commands
It had the following HTTP request headers:
Host:
j vickroy wrote:
Stefan Behnel wrote:
j vickroy, 07.05.2010 20:44:
I apologize if this is not the appropriate forum for a question about
Hudson (http://hudson-ci.org/), but I did not know where else to ask
and
my web searches have not been fruitful.
Certainly nice to read something about
Do to some debugging if a version contains a bug and needs to be fixed
there manually.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On May 10, 10:22 am, Kushal Kumaran kushal.kumaran+pyt...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 7:30 PM, kak...@gmail.com kak...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi to all, i want to ask you a question, concerning the best way to do
the following as a POST request:
There is server-servlet that accepts
On May 10, 6:01 am, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
On 10 Mai, 03:09, Patrick Maupin pmau...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 9, 6:39 pm, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
but if they aren't pitching it directly at you, why would you believe
that they are trying to change your
In article 074b412a-c2f4-4090-a52c-4d69edb29...@d39g2000yqa.googlegroups.com,
Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
Actually, the copyleft licences don't force anyone to give back
changes: they oblige people to pass on changes.
IMO, that's a distinction without a difference, particularly if you
On Mon, 10 May 2010 07:26:42 -0700 (PDT)
moerchendiser2k3 googler.1.webmas...@spamgourmet.com wrote:
Do to some debugging if a version contains a bug and needs to be fixed
there manually.
This is certainly the wrong approach.
To know if your Python code is leaking references, use either
supply sports shoes. The brand Sports shoes basketball shoes, Boot,
walling shoes, Athletic shoes, Jogging shoes, running shoes, leather
shoes, football, shoe sports shoe Footwear Sneaker, Shox Max Rift T-
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Jersey jeans Sock Jacks,
[we have previously been using MIT-style and BSD-style licensing in
this thread for the most part -- given the poster who suggested that
Apache makes more sense these days, I'm switching to that terminology]
In article 99386b28-1636-4f81-beec-3756970d3...@11g2000prv.googlegroups.com,
Carl Banks
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
j vickroy wrote:
Stefan Behnel wrote:
j vickroy, 07.05.2010 20:44:
I apologize if this is not the appropriate forum for a question about
Hudson (http://hudson-ci.org/), but I did not know where else to ask
and
my web searches have not been fruitful.
Certainly
On May 5, 8:00 am, James Mills prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au wrote:
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 3:35 PM, Michele Simionato
michele.simion...@gmail.com wrote:
I am sure it has, but I was talking about just putting in the
repository an index.html file and have it published, the wayI hear it
In article mailman.2840.1273484131.23598.python-l...@python.org,
James Mills prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:50 PM, Xavier Ho cont...@xavierho.com wrote:
Have I missed something, or wouldn't this work just as well:
list_of_strings = ['2', 'awes', '3465sdg',
On 10 Mai, 17:06, a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
In article
074b412a-c2f4-4090-a52c-4d69edb29...@d39g2000yqa.googlegroups.com,
Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
Actually, the copyleft licences don't force anyone to give back
changes: they oblige people to pass on changes.
IMO,
Samuel Williams space.ship.travel...@gmail.com writes:
Is Python a functional programming language?
It supports some aspects of functional programming but I wouldn't go as
far as to call it an FPL.
Is this a paradigm that is well supported by both the language syntax
and the general
In article 7xvdavd4bq@ruckus.brouhaha.com,
Paul Rubin no.em...@nospam.invalid wrote:
If your goal is to engage in functional programming, you're better off
using a language designed for that purpose. Python is a pragmatic
language from an imperative tradition, that has some functional
Hi all,
Sorry for the short notice.
We (the Zope/Python Users Group of DC) are having a
TurboGears 2 training class this weekend in Washington, DC USA
taught by core developer Chris Perkins.
Please consider attending! And, I would appreciate you spreading the
word to anyone you think may be
On May 10, 12:37 pm, Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
On 10 Mai, 17:06, a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
In article
074b412a-c2f4-4090-a52c-4d69edb29...@d39g2000yqa.googlegroups.com,
Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
Actually, the copyleft licences don't force anyone to give
On Tue, 11 May 2010 00:24:22 +1200, Samuel Williams wrote:
Is Python a functional programming language?
Not in any meaningful sense of the term.
Is this a paradigm that is well supported by both the language syntax and
the general programming APIs?
No.
I heard that lambdas were limited to
How can I concatenate 2 hex strings (e.g. '\x16' and '\xb9') then convert
the answer to an integer?
When I try i always end up with the ASCII equivalent!
Thanks,
Anthony
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I know how to use timeit and/or profile to measure the current run-time
cost of some code.
I want to record the time used by some original implementation, then
after I rewrite it, I want to find out if I made stuff faster or slower,
and by how much.
Other than me writing down numbers on a piece
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 12:55 PM, Anthony Cole anthony.c...@gmail.com wrote:
How can I concatenate 2 hex strings (e.g. '\x16' and '\xb9') then convert
the answer to an integer?
When I try i always end up with the ASCII equivalent!
I think you want the `struct` module:
struct — Interpret
Anthony Cole wrote:
How can I concatenate 2 hex strings (e.g. '\x16' and '\xb9') then convert
the answer to an integer?
When I try i always end up with the ASCII equivalent!
Those are just bytestrings (assuming you're using Python 2.x), ie
strings using 1 byte per character. You can convert
Werner F. Bruhin wrote:
Just upgraded on my Windows 7 machine my copy of 2.6.4 to 2.6.5.
However doing sys.version still shows 2.6.4 even so python.exe is dated
19. March 2010 with a size of 26.624 bytes.
Is this a known issue? Or did I do something wrong?
Look at the copy of
Pythonistas:
I have a question to epydoc-devel, but it might be languishing:
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?thread_name=l2n860c114f1005061707k1ccf68cdz277a3d875b99fe04%40mail.gmail.comforum_name=epydoc-devel
How do you populate the index.html output with your (insanely clever)
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 1:29 PM, Phlip phlip2...@gmail.com wrote:
Pythonistas:
snip
The question for the rest of Python-Land: Should I be using a better
documentation extractor? (pydoc is too mundane so far.)
Sphinx is in vogue right now:
http://sphinx.pocoo.org/
It's used for the official
On May 10, 1:39 pm, Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com wrote:
Sphinx is in vogue right now:http://sphinx.pocoo.org/
It's used for the official docs and its results are quite pretty.
The manager said to hold off on Sphinx until the next phase - then ran
off to get married or something.
But yet I
Hi everyone,
I'm new to Python and have been playing around with it using the
Enthought Python distribution for Mac OS X 10.6.3 (EPD academic
license, version 6.1 with python 2.6.4).
It's been great learning the basics, but I've started running into
problems when I'm trying to use the PIL
On May 10, 1:51 pm, Phlip phlip2...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 10, 1:39 pm, Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com wrote:
Sphinx is in vogue right now:http://sphinx.pocoo.org/
Okay, we have ten thousand classes to document. How to add them all to
index.rst?
--
On 10-May-10 10:21 AM, John Maclean wrote:
On 10/05/2010 14:38, J. Cliff Dyer wrote:
My guess is you mixed tabs and spaces. One tab is always treated by the
python interpreter as being equal to eight spaces, which is two
indentation levels in your code.
Though if it were exactly as you show
As subject says, what is the differences of 'is not' and '!='. Confusing..
--
Passion is my style
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 4:25 PM, AON LAZIO aonla...@gmail.com wrote:
As subject says, what is the differences of 'is not' and '!='. Confusing..
!= checks value inequality, `is not` checks object identity /
pointer inequality
Unless you're doing `foo is not None`, you almost always want !=.
By
AON LAZIO wrote:
As subject says, what is the differences of 'is not' and '!='. Confusing..
is not checks if two objects are not identical. != checks if two
objects are not equal.
Example:
Two apples may be equal in size, form and color but they can never be
identical because they are made
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 5:17 PM, cjw c...@ncf.ca wrote:
PyScripter and PythonWin permit the user to choose the equivalence of tabs
and spaces. I like two spaces = on tab, it's a matter of taste. I feel
that eight spaces is too much.
While it is a matter of taste, PEP 8 recommends 4 spaces
On 10 mayo, 09:24, Samuel Williams space.ship.travel...@gmail.com
wrote:
Dear Friends,
Is Python a functional programming language?
Is this a paradigm that is well supported by both the language syntax and the
general programming APIs?
I heard that lambdas were limited to a single
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) writes:
Paul Boddie p...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
Actually, the copyleft licences don't force anyone to give back
changes: they oblige people to pass on changes.
IMO, that's a distinction without a difference, particularly if you
define give back as referring to the
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 8:26 PM, kak...@gmail.com kak...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 10, 10:22 am, Kushal Kumaran kushal.kumaran+pyt...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 7:30 PM, kak...@gmail.com kak...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi to all, i want to ask you a question, concerning the best way to do
On Mon, 10 May 2010 20:13:44 +, Matthew Wilson wrote:
I know how to use timeit and/or profile to measure the current run-time
cost of some code.
I want to record the time used by some original implementation, then
after I rewrite it, I want to find out if I made stuff faster or slower,
Thanks to everyone for their great feedback, it is highly appreciated.
Kind regards,
Samuel
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 5/10/2010 5:35 AM, James Mills wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:50 PM, Xavier Hocont...@xavierho.com wrote:
Have I missed something, or wouldn't this work just as well:
list_of_strings = ['2', 'awes', '3465sdg', 'dbsdf', 'asdgas']
[word for word in list_of_strings if word[0] == 'a']
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 10:23 PM, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 5/10/2010 5:35 AM, James Mills wrote:
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:50 PM, Xavier Hocont...@xavierho.com wrote:
Have I missed something, or wouldn't this work just as well:
list_of_strings = ['2', 'awes', '3465sdg',
In message
22cf35af-44d1-43fe-8b90-07f2c6545...@i10g2000yqh.googlegroups.com,
Guillermo wrote:
If you've ever missed it on Windows and you can use Powershell ...
I thought the whole point of Windows was to get away from this command-line
stuff. Not such a good idea after all?
--
In message mailman.2771.1273327690.23598.python-l...@python.org, Alex Hall
wrote:
... I have about fifteen vars in a function which have to be
global.
Why not make them class variables, e.g.
class my_namespace :
var1 = ...
var2 = ...
#end my_namespace
def
In message
d46338a8-d08c-449b-b656-a6cf9f6a6...@l28g2000yqd.googlegroups.com,
james_027 wrote:
I was working with regex on a very large text, really large but I have
time constrained.
“Fast regex” is a contradiction in terms. You use regexes when you want ease
of definition and application,
Steven Bethard steven.beth...@gmail.com added the comment:
2010/5/9 Filip Gruszczyński rep...@bugs.python.org:
So, is there any decision here, so that I could get down to providing better
patch?
I guess I'd like to hear from someone about how these things work in
zsh. If we're going to add a
New submission from Ronald Oussoren ronaldousso...@mac.com:
I got a build error when building the 2.7b2 installers because the MacOS module
couldn't be build. That turns out to be caused by an issue in the configure
script: for some reason the check for the 10.5 SDK gives the wrong answer
Roumen Petrov bugtr...@roumenpetrov.info added the comment:
I don't have access to source so my comment will be based only on diffs from
above mentioned revisions.
r80969:
- AC_LANG_PROGRAM ... with main function in body . It is legal as I don't know
C compiler that fail to compile code like
Roumen Petrov bugtr...@roumenpetrov.info added the comment:
Hmm, this issue was fixed before.
My be restore of 2.6 distutils ignore those fixes. It is good to compare
current Lib/distutils/sysconfig.py with version from Dec 2009 .
--
nosy: +rpetrov
Ronald Oussoren ronaldousso...@mac.com added the comment:
I intend to forward port the fix to 3.2 in the near future, to avoid missing
real issues when I do updates to the platform support for OSX.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
I think this was fixed in r80969, but confirmation would be good.
--
nosy: +mark.dickinson
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8673
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
Sorry; r81004, rather.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8673
___
___
Ronald Oussoren ronaldousso...@mac.com added the comment:
Cool, thanks. I'll check this later this week.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8673
___
Changes by Andrej Krpic akrpi...@gmail.com:
--
components: +Windows
type: - behavior
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue7879
___
___
John J Lee jj...@users.sourceforge.net added the comment:
I'll upload a patch when I'm back home (bugs.python.org went down yesterday).
Will turn docstring into comment.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue3704
New submission from Tomas Hoger tho...@redhat.com:
SVN commit r64114 added integer overflow checks to multiple modules. Checks
added to audioop module are incorrect and can still be bypassed:
http://svn.python.org/view/python/trunk/Modules/audioop.c?r1=64114r2=64113
- audioop_tostereo -
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Victor, you've been dealing with Python's default encoding lately, care to
render an opinion on the correct fix for this bug?
@Filip: the patch will need a unit test, which will also help with assessing
the validity of the fix.
Filip Gruszczyński grusz...@gmail.com added the comment:
I'll try to code a small test this evening.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8256
___
Changes by Brian Curtin cur...@acm.org:
--
title: test_winsound failing on Windows Server 2008 - test_winsound fails when
no playback devices configured
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8618
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
Thanks for the patch. I agree that undefined behaviour (e.g., from signed
overflow) should be avoided where at all possible.
Do you have any Python examples that failed to trigger the overflow on your
platform? If so, it would be useful
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
Unless you have an explicit exploit, I think the 'type' should be 'behavior'
rather than 'security'.
--
stage: - unit test needed
type: security - behavior
versions: +Python 2.7, Python 3.1, Python 3.2
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
The patch is wrong: _PyUnicode_AsString(Py_None) should not return utf8!
I suggest that since PyOS_Readline() write the prompt to stderr, the conversion
uses the encoding of stderr.
--
nosy: +amaury.forgeotdarc
Giampaolo Rodola' g.rod...@gmail.com added the comment:
This is now committed as r81041.
I've also removed the long description from what's new file, as you were
suggesting.
The other two patches should be adapted for 3.2.
--
___
Python tracker
Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com added the comment:
Okay, it looks to me as though all those 'int' lengths should really be
'Py_ssize_t'. I don't think that's something we can change in 2.6, though;
probably not in 2.7 either, since we're getting too close to the release. It
can and
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
zsh's completion system is completely programmable. I looks like it would be
pretty easy to add generic 'python script' support widgets(*) using this hidden
option, and probably other neat tricks as well. Something that would make it
Tomas Hoger tho...@redhat.com added the comment:
Do you have any Python examples that failed to trigger the overflow
on your platform?
No, I've not really tried to create some, as I found it while looking into
similar checks added to rgbimg module (which is dead and removed upstream now)
in
Giampaolo Rodola' g.rod...@gmail.com added the comment:
Committed in r81043 (trunk) and r81044 (3.2).
Thanks for your comments.
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assignee: josiahcarlson - giampaolo.rodola
components: +Tests
resolution: - fixed
stage: - committed/rejected
versions: +Python 2.7, Python 3.2
Changes by Giampaolo Rodola' g.rod...@gmail.com:
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status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8490
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Giampaolo Rodola' g.rod...@gmail.com added the comment:
Closed as duplicate of issue7037.
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nosy: +giampaolo.rodola
resolution: - duplicate
status: open - closed
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue7040
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
what is this raise_on_bad additional argument?
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nosy: +amaury.forgeotdarc
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8666
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Giampaolo Rodola' g.rod...@gmail.com added the comment:
I'm not a xml* modules user but I've tried to apply the patch against the trunk
and it seems it still works.
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nosy: +effbot, giampaolo.rodola, loewis
versions: +Python 2.7, Python 3.1, Python 3.2 -Python 3.0
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