On Wed, 2012-06-06 at 16:56 -0400, Jerry Hill wrote:
For what it's worth, I've never seen either of those constructs (see
overleaf and see over). Are they perhaps more common in a
particular academic context, or possibly more common in places that
use British English spellings rather than
On Wed, 2012-06-06 at 12:03 +0200, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
block else for other cases - this sounds as if it was blocking the
else. Maybe else-block for other cases,
I would say else block. else-block is grammatically correct too, but
I don't think I've seen it used regularly.
RE: the order -
On Tue, 2012-05-15 at 12:39 +0200, Pascal Chambon wrote:
believe me all this fuss is pitiful compared to the real harm that was
done numerous time to willing newcomers, on pyjs' old ML, when they
weren't aware about the heavy dogmas lying around.
A demo sample (I quote it each time the
On Tue, 2012-05-08 at 15:20 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote:
I hope that pyjamas can be restored at some point to a single live
project. Whether that's headed by Luke Leighton or C Anthony Risinger
(neither of whom I know at all and thus I can't speak to either's
merits) or someone else, I don't
On Wed, 2012-05-02 at 17:31 +0200, Tomasz Rola wrote:
positive aura drives more people and more permamently towards you. Perhaps he
should
develop an alter ego that could stand side by side with Dalai Lama and see
which one gets more attention.
Really?
On Fri, 2012-04-27 at 19:57 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 7:49 PM, Miles Rout miles.r...@gmail.com wrote:
We have if inside list comprehensions? I didn't know that, could you provide
an example?
You mean like:
[x*2+1 for x in range(10) if x%3]
Or like:
print [
On Thu, 2012-04-05 at 12:00 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
The reason this is a Gotcha rather than a bug is because the JSON
standard specifies the behaviour (probably in order to be compatible with
Javascript).
It's not to be compatible with javascript (you can use either in
javascript)
I
On Sat, 2012-02-25 at 09:56 -0800, Tobiah wrote:
For every floating point
number there is a corresponding real number, but 0% of real numbers
can be represented exactly by floating point numbers.
It seems to me that there are a great many real numbers that can be
represented exactly
(Sorry for top-posting this bit, but I think it's required before the
rest of my response)
At the risk of wading into this from a UK citizen's perspective:
You're imagining a public healthcare system as if it were private.
Imagine you go to a doctor and say I've got the flu, can you give me
On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 09:05 -0500, Roy Smith wrote:
I guess MongoDB is not a serious database?
That's opening up a can of worms ;)
... anyway, cassandra is far better.
Tim
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 2012-01-06 at 10:03 +, Ivan wrote:
Dear All
I'm developing a python application for which I need to support a
non-standard character encoding (specifically ISO 6937/2-1983, Addendum
1-1989).
If your system version of iconv contains that encoding (mine does) then
you could use
On Fri, 2012-01-06 at 12:00 -0800, jmfauth wrote:
The distibution of such a codec may be a problem.
There is a register_codec method (or similar) in the codecs module.
Tim
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
be able to keep a lot of the goodness,
then put in a translator or converter to cpp and gain performance by
using cpp code. Sounds like Rpython, cython, shedskin are doing a lot
or all of this, so lots to study up on.
Yup
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 2011-12-16 at 05:21 -0800, Brad Tilley wrote:
107 void increment_counter( unsigned int counter )
108 {
109 boost::mutex::scoped_lock lock( counter_lock );
110 ++counter;
111 }
with counter_lock:
counter += 1
... where
On Fri, 2011-12-16 at 09:24 -0500, Brad Tilley wrote:
So something like this then:
import threading
shared_container = []
lock = threading.Lock()
class thread_example( threading.Thread ):
def __init__( self ):
threading.Thread.__init__ (self)
def run(t):
On Mon, 2011-11-14 at 12:30 -0700, Steve Edlefsen wrote:
I did a search on files named python on my machine.
There are 23 not including the ones in the Plone
buildout-cache in my account. Seems like a lot of
applications install their own copy of python.
There are also
a missing zlib module - but it's possible that it might
be missing if you don't have the zlib/deflate headers installed - if
they're not available then I'd try installing them and then reinstalling
the package you started with.
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, 2011-11-12 at 12:56 +0100, candide wrote:
So what is the pragmatics of the as syntax ?
Another case:
try:
import json
except:
import simplejson as json
(same goes for several modules where the C implementation may or may not
be available)
Tim
--
On Thu, 2011-11-10 at 22:25 +0800, Jerry Zhang wrote:
2011/11/10 Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com
On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 12:58 AM, Jerry Zhang
jerry.scofi...@gmail.com wrote:
Cls_a:
def __init__(self):
self.at1 = 1
Cls_b:
On Fri, 2011-08-26 at 08:35 -0700, lblake wrote:
Hi I am new to python I am at bit lost as to why my unit test is
failing below is the code and the unit test:
class Centipede(object):
legs, stomach
This doesn't do what you think it does.
legs, stomach is a statement and is not defining
(assuming you're designing an application that can have multiple
instances running in parallel so that you can run over multiple servers
anyway).
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
characters in 2011?
I'd rather have two files open with 80 columns in them than a single
file with 160 columns and have to switch between files.
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 2011-03-28 at 12:42 +0200, Esben Nielsen wrote:
We are making a prototype program in Python. I discovered the output was
non-deterministic, i.e. I rerun the program on the same input files and
get different output files. We do not use any random calls, nor
threading.
One of us
On Fri, 2011-03-25 at 09:49 +0100, Andrea Crotti wrote:
Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu writes:
For the reason Stefan explained and hinted above. Try the following instead:
def fib_iter(n, _cache = [1,1]):
k = len(_cache)
if n = k:
for i in range(k, n+1):
On Wed, 2011-02-23 at 13:57 +, Jorgen Grahn wrote:
If that's the *only* such use, I'd experiment with writing them as
sortable text to file, and run GNU sort (the Unix utility) on the file.
It seems to have a clever file-backed sort algorithm.
+1 - and experiment with the different flags
happening)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
-
although I suppose that if production never starts because the
improvements are done to a spec, rather than the product, it would be a
massive hindrance.
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
with would feel comfortable reading C - so for the
other half reading C source code probably isn't going to help them
understand exactly what's going on (although in the long run it might
help them a lot)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, 2010-11-02 at 04:23 -0700, jk wrote:
This (http://epydoc.sourceforge.net/stdlib/) is what I'm talking
about.
Aaaarrr
Why aren't the official docs like this,
Because not everyone likes documentation like that. Personally I far
prefer the existing documentation to the
On Sun, 2010-10-17 at 17:10 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
I am pleased to announce the first public release of stats for Python.
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/stats
Quick comment on your sum() function:
http://docs.python.org/library/math.html#math.fsum
(in 2.6 and above)
should do the same
On Fri, 2010-09-03 at 08:52 +0200, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
Tim Wintle wrote:
[..] under the hood, cpython does something like this (in psudo-code)
itterator = xrange(imax)
while 1:
next_attribute = itterator.next
try:
i = next_attribute()
except:
break
On Thu, 2010-09-02 at 12:02 +0200, Michael Kreim wrote:
Hi,
I was comparing the speed of a simple loop program between Matlab and
Python.
Unfortunately my Python Code was much slower and I do not understand why.
The main reason is that, under the hood, cpython does something like
this (in
On Thu, 2010-09-02 at 16:13 +0200, Roland Koebler wrote:
Hi,
Are there any ways to speed up the for/xrange loop?
You can use psyco.
Assuming you've got a 32-bit machine.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sun, 2010-08-01 at 20:01 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote:
Not every C programmer knows or wants to learn C++.
I think Terry is the only person that's mentioned this - but I'd like to
give extra support to it - I for one prefer C to C++ (as someone that
writes quite a lot of C extension modules).
On Mon, 2010-07-12 at 23:28 +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote:
On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 10:13 PM, geremy condra debat...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 4:59 PM, lkcl luke.leigh...@gmail.com wrote:
there probably exist perfectly good web frameworks that are capable of
doing
On Thu, 2010-06-24 at 21:52 -0500, Peng Yu wrote:
http://psyco.sourceforge.net/
The above package can improve python program on 32 bit library. But I
need to run on 64 bit library. Is there any other module that can help
improving the performance of python on 64 bit?
As I understand it,
On Thu, 2010-06-24 at 09:33 -0700, ilovesss2004 wrote:
On Jun 24, 5:50 pm, Tim Harig user...@ilthio.net wrote:
On 2010-06-24, ilovesss2004 yyiillu...@gmail.com wrote:
If I run
1.0/10**10
python will return 0
Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 11 2009, 23:02:59)
[GCC 3.4.6] on linux2
On Tue, 2010-06-08 at 08:24 -0700, Anthony Papillion wrote:
resp, count, first, last, name = server.group('comp.lang.python')
resp, items = server.xover(first, last)
for subject in items:
resp, subject = server.xhdr('subject', first, last)
print subject
While the
On Fri, 2010-03-26 at 12:08 -0400, Mel wrote:
Somewhere on the Internet there's a particularly brilliant pop song
called Code Monkey.
http://www.jonathancoulton.com/2006/04/14/thing-a-week-29-code-monkey/
(he's linked to the mp3 from there)
--
On Wed, 2010-03-24 at 10:44 -0700, _wolf wrote:
yes we can! http://github.com/facebook/pyre2
I had made a thin wrapper experiment with here - looks like the version
he's shipped is relatively complete and compatible with the re module
though.
I'll be interested in seeing how well it performs -
On Mon, 2010-03-22 at 14:45 +, kj wrote:
I have a list of items L, and a test function is_invalid that checks
the validity of each item. To check that there are no invalid
items in L, I could check the value of any(map(is_invalid, L)).
But this approach is suboptimal in the sense that, no
On Thu, 2010-03-11 at 20:38 +0200, Ludolph wrote:
I decided I can use byteplay3 http://pypi.python.org/pypi/byteplay/ to
disassemble the code to workable objects, It even allows me to rebuild
the objects to bytecode. So if I define patterns on how python
interrupts the source code to
On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 10:39 -0800, Pete Emerson wrote:
I am looking for advice along the lines of an easier way to do this
or a more python way (I'm sure that's asking for trouble!) or
people commonly do this instead or here's a slick trick or oh,
interesting, here's my version to do the same
On Fri, 2010-03-05 at 07:53 -0800, Pete Emerson wrote:
Thanks for your response, further questions inline.
On Mar 4, 11:07 am, Tim Wintle tim.win...@teamrubber.com wrote:
On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 10:39 -0800, Pete Emerson wrote:
I am looking for advice along the lines of an easier way to do
On Wed, 2010-03-03 at 20:39 +0100, mk wrote:
Hello Tim,
Pardon the questions but I haven't had the need to use denormalization
yet, so:
IOW you basically merged the tables like follows?
CREATE TABLE projects (
client_id BIGINT NOT NULL,
project_id BIGINT NOT NULL,
cost
On Wed, 2010-03-03 at 16:23 -0500, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
On Wed, 03 Mar 2010 20:39:35 +0100
mk mrk...@gmail.com wrote:
If you denormalise the table, and update the first index to be on
(client_id, project_id, date) it can end up running far more quickly -
Maybe. Don't start with
On Wed, 2010-03-03 at 17:26 +0100, mk wrote:
So there *may* be some evidence that joins are indeed bad in
practice.
If someone has smth specific/interesting on the subject, please post.
I have found joins to cause problems in a few cases - I'm talking about
relatively large tables though -
On Thu, 2010-02-25 at 02:26 -0800, simn_stv wrote:
i plan to build an application, a network based application that i
estimate (and seriously hope) would get as many as 100, 000 hits a day
(hehe,...my dad always told me to 'AIM HIGH' ;0), not some 'facebook'
or anything like it, its mainly for
On Fri, 2010-01-29 at 07:54 -0800, Thomas Allen wrote:
The second is that when it does crash, I don't know about it...what
would be sufficient as a keep-alive script to restart it? I suppose
I could use something like EventMachine (already installed on my
server) to watch the PID file if it
On Tue, 2009-12-29 at 19:44 +0100, Chris Colbert wrote:
I'm happy to announce the first beta release of Pymazon: a Python
implemented alternative to the Amazon mp3 downloader.
Pymazon was created specifically to alleviate the issues surrounding
the Linux version of the Amazon mp3 downloader
On Sun, 2009-12-27 at 20:10 +, Star Glider wrote:
the problem is that the one of the fields as text in rich text format,
and it needs to be display without the RTF markup, of course.
Is there any way to convert RTF to HTML?
Depending on how precisely you need to lay it out you might find
On Fri, 2009-12-18 at 15:44 +0100, Virgil Stokes wrote:
I have a rather large Java package for the analysis of networks that I
would like to convert to Python. Many of the classes in the Java package
are Serializable.
Any recommendations on Java-to-Python (2.6) would be appreciated.
I
On Wed, 2009-12-02 at 02:07 -0500, Joel Madigan wrote:
that it is possible to make it print the path to the finish in the
order the steps were taken. That is, the algorithm as written
produces: (4,0) (4,1) (3,1) (3,2) (3,3) (2,3) (1,3) (1,2) True
Rather than (1,2) (1,3) (2,3) (3,3) (3,2)
On Fri, 2009-11-27 at 17:06 +0100, S. Chris Colbert wrote:
This seems strange to me, but perhaps I am just missing something:
snip
I would think that second loop should terminate at 9.9, no?
I am missing something fundamental?
Floating points variables ...
On Tue, 2009-11-24 at 18:25 +, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
Le Tue, 24 Nov 2009 08:58:40 -0800, Paul Boddie a écrit :
As you
point out, a lot of this RISC vs. CISC analysis (and inferences
drawn
from Python bytecode analysis) is somewhat academic: the cost of the
JUMP_IF_FALSE instruction
On Fri, 2009-10-16 at 01:01 +0200, Mick Krippendorf wrote:
Maybe my English (and my memory) is just not so good. I'm german, and
here abnormal and anormal are both negations of normal, but with
a slight difference in meaning. anormal means just not normal,
whereas the meaning of abnormal is
On Mon, 2009-10-05 at 18:36 +0200, Donn wrote:
see: http://www.panda3d.org/wiki/index.php/Attaching_an_Object_to_a_Joint
+1 for Panda 3d.
Their Node graph is very intuitive for animating joints, and Panda's API
is very nice and clean.
TimW
--
On Wed, 2009-09-02 at 08:31 -0700, JonathanB wrote:
I am a self-taught Python programmer with a liberal arts degree
(Cross-cultural studies). I have been programming for several years
now and would like to get a job as a python programmer. Unfortunately
most of the job posts I have seen are
/python-list/2009-June/716845.html
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 2009-07-15 at 02:02 -0700, Jonathan Gardner wrote:
On Jul 14, 4:48 pm, Ethan Furman et...@stoneleaf.us wrote:
A whole family of supers. :)
All the things binary operators can do, Lisp
does with 0, 1, 2, or more arguments.
+1
n-ary operators are great, but binary operators are
On Thu, 2009-07-02 at 10:32 -0500, Wells Oliver wrote:
for row in cursor.fetchall():
print row.keys()
What I get is:
['league', 'BB', 'HR', 'IP', 'K', 'H', 'player_id', 'ER']
Neither alphabetical nor the order in which they were specified in the
query nor... any seeming order I can
On Sat, 2009-06-27 at 06:03 +0100, João Valverde wrote:
To answer the question of what I need the BSTs for, without getting
into too many boring details it is to merge and sort IP blocklists,
that is, large datasets of ranges in the form of (IP address, IP
address, string).
snip
As an
to kill the
program half way through and found it had died half way through
processing a file and lost my code!
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thu, 2009-06-11 at 23:18 +0100, Harry wrote:
HI ,
I have number of process run on different windows servers which run's with
different command line parameters. for example process.exe -inputddd
statusurl: http://sss.com ., These parameters can vary from host to host.
using Psexec I know
On Fri, 2009-06-12 at 00:30 -0700, edexter wrote:
I suspect you want to install python 2.4 and then reinstall 2.6 I did
that in windows and I don't understand why it wouldn't work in linux
It won't normally work on linux these days because most distributions of
gnu/linux need python to run the
On Sun, 2009-06-07 at 16:40 -0600, Brian wrote:
On Fri, Jun 5, 2009 at 3:29 AM, Nick Craig-Wood n...@craig-wood.com
wrote:
It is an interesting idea for a number of reasons, the main
one as far
as I'm concerned is that it is more of a port of CPython to a
new
On Fri, 2009-05-22 at 13:19 +0200, Andre Engels wrote:
number/total = 998/999 = 0
number/total*100 = 0*100 = 0
float(number/total*100) = float(0) = 0.0
Change float(number/total*100) to float(number)/total*100 and it
should work:
I'd use:
(number * 100.)/total
- works because
int *
On Fri, 2009-05-22 at 05:51 -0700, Craig wrote:
I use python 2.6.2 and i useing ubuntu 9.04 not windows.
What are you trying to install?
is it available in Synaptic package manager?
If it's a program written in python, then there may be a file called
setup.py. If there is then open a
On Fri, 2009-05-22 at 09:59 -0400, Dave Angel wrote:
Tim Wintle wrote:
On Fri, 2009-05-22 at 13:19 +0200, Andre Engels wrote:
Change float(number/total*100) to float(number)/total*100 and it
should work:
I'd use:
(number * 100.)/total
- works because
int * float
On Mon, 2009-05-04 at 19:51 +0100, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
Bearophile, there is a thread on python-ideas about tail-call
optimization at the moment.
Oooh - haven't noticed that (and don't have time to follow it), but has
anyone seen the results I got a week or so ago from briefly playing with
for small sizes than Java's are - that's because
they have been optimised to perform efficiently at any size, at the
expense of being slightly less efficient than they could be for small
sizes)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sun, 2009-04-19 at 18:43 +0200, Emmanuel Surleau wrote:
Hi there,
Exploring the Python standard library, I was surprised to see that several
packages (ConfigParser, logging...) use mixed case for methods all over the
place. I assume that they were written back when the Python styling
On Sun, 2009-04-19 at 06:26 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
(btw, how come nobody has mentioned python bytecode? Most flow
control is jumps)
I wrote yesterday:
GOTO, after all, is just a jump, and we use jumps in Python all the
time:
raise Exception
break
continue
if... elif...
various angles ;-)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
database user btw, but it seems to happen with object
database people too - we get so used to our own paradigm that we don't
think about other ways of doing the task)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
is more than justified in some situations
(when it's jumping to within 10-20 lines of the start position, and it's
a routine that needs to be highly optimised - I'm thinking tail
recursion etc.)
(btw, how come nobody has mentioned python bytecode? Most flow control
is jumps)
Tim Wintle
--
http
critical software it's crazy.
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, 2009-04-04 at 15:36 -0500, Robert Kern wrote:
On 2009-04-04 12:07, Tim Wintle wrote:
(I didn't expect such strong responses btw!)
You are proposing the removal of a general, orthogonal feature (and
breaking
code in consequence!) just because of a new syntax for a single special
On Sat, 2009-04-04 at 06:37 -0700, grkunt...@gmail.com wrote:
If I am writing in Python, since it is dynamically, but strongly
typed, I really should check that each parameter is of the expected
type, or at least can respond to the method I plan on calling (duck
typing). Every call should be
On Sat, 2009-04-04 at 02:03 -0500, Robert Kern wrote:
Let's be clear: python-ideas seems positive on the idea of adding a .clear()
method. *Completely removing* slice assignment has not been broached there.
Yup, sorry - I did mean to refer to the initial suggestion, rather than
my comments
On Fri, 2009-04-03 at 13:12 -0400, Mel wrote:
I think it would also be better to have One (and prefereably Only One)
Obvious Way To Do It. That obvious way, for those who work with
Python's ‘set’ and ‘dict’, is a ‘clear’ method. It seems best to have
‘list’ conform with this also.
that the object:
mylist[a:b:c]
return an iterator that is non-assignable appears to fix this
non-orthogonality as far as I can immediately see (although I am *very*
tired, and haven't thought it through far enough!)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
that thing (twitter), and I still can't
work out why (apart from hacks such as using it as a hosted queue for
cross-server comms, or receiving cheap sms to your app)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 2009-04-01 at 18:45 -0700, Aaron Brady wrote:
My game loop looks like this:
poll events, get 1 at most
send to server
wait for server reply
render entire frame
The look I'm suggesting is:
poll events
write to (non-blocking) socket
render frame
check non-blocking socket and add
On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 06:28 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
In set theory, you start by defining the integers like this:
snip
0 = len( {} )
1 = len( {{}} )
2 = len( {{}, {{}}} )
3 = len( {{}, {{}}, {{}, {{}}} )
etc.
not quite len() - surely you mean something like any object along with
an
On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 06:50 -0700, Aaron Brady wrote:
It's just that if you register a collision in between the time that
one object has changed its position and momentum, and the time you
learn about it, you have to retroactively edit the collision, restore
hit points, and recalculate the
On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 15:16 -0700, Emile van Sebille wrote:
Lou Pecora wrote:
Confusion only comes when you try to force the
defintion of one of them on the other and then say it's illogical or not
natural. Both are natural.
Consider the French 'Premiere etage' vs the American 'First
other their local [game] time every few seconds, and if the
received time is ahead of the local time then the receiving machine
updates it's time to match - that way they are always out by at most the
shortest time it takes for a packet to travel from one to the other.
Tim Wintle
--
http
checking the method on the class definition.
Seem to remember Raymond Hettinger pointing to the code that does this
as part of his descriptor tutorial talk at europython - but I can't
find the slides to reference.
hope that helps,
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python
On Wed, 2009-03-18 at 11:13 -0700, Mike Driscoll wrote:
On Mar 18, 1:09 am, Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar
Any decent installer is able to register a program so it runs on startup
(InnoSetup, by example). Anyway, if you want to it it yourself,
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:39 -0700, John Posner wrote:
(My apologies if the thread has already covered this.) I believe I understand
the WHAT in this situation, but I don't understand the WHY ...
Is there a beneficial effect of silently creating the instance attribute,
which outweighs the
On Mon, 2009-03-16 at 04:02 +, Tim Wintle wrote:
On Sun, 2009-03-15 at 10:39 -0700, John Posner wrote:
Doh, reply out of thread there - I meant to reply to Rhodi's comment
further down.
Is there any actual advantage to self.attribute picking up
Class.attribute instead of raising
)
list_of_coordinates.append((chromosome,posn))
(or something like that)
Tim Wintle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 21:28 -0700, Luis Gonzalez wrote:
C'mon guys, Xha Lee always wins, because fools like you get mad at him
instead of ignoring him.
Here here!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 2009-03-09 at 11:19 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
Certainly. A programmer that only knows one language would be too
limited. Try as many programming language as you can, and especially
look for programming languages that have obscenely different paradigm
than the language you already know.
of _Everything_ to
disk, so that upgrades can happen cleanly - sure that's going to be
fixed though.
Startup time is a bit slow too, but it's designed to be left open all
the time, and it's fairly zippy once it's open IMO.
Tim Wintle
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On Sat, 2009-03-07 at 12:53 -0800, Sapote wrote:
I have an incrementing variable disc_num that I could insert in the
line below to create discspanisoX.iso where X is incrementing...
burn_cmd = mkisofs -udf -o /home/donkey/discspaniso.iso -graft-
points --path-list %s %(temp_list)
On Sat, 2009-03-07 at 21:25 +, Tim Wintle wrote:
burn_cmd = mkisofs -udf -o /home/donkey/discspaniso%d.iso
-graft-points --path-list %s %(x,temp_list)
obviously I meant to say
burn_cmd = mkisofs -udf -o /home/donkey/discspaniso%
d.iso-graft-points --path-list %s %(disc_num,temp_list
Guilherme Polo for doing all the tough work as far as I
tell from the issue and the commit logs.
Am I right this was a Google Summer of Code project? If so then thanks
to Google as well for sponsoring it.
Tim Wintle
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all running.
Similarly, on various machines I use CPython 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6 and
Jython 2.2 for various reasons - and I'm certainly planning on using
PyPy a large amount once it's stable.
I used the Beta of 3.0, but to be honest I haven't used it for anything
proper yet.
Tim Wintle
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