"Nathan Pinno" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I use input() all the time. I know many people say it ain't safe, but
> whose going to use it to crash their own comp? Only an insane person
> would,
This is usage Guido intended it for, not for production apps distri
Kay Schluehr wrote:
>
> Now lets drop the assumption that a and b commute. More general: let be
> M a set of expressions and X a subset of M where each element of X
> commutes with each element of M: how can a product with factors in M be
> evaluated/simplified under the condition of additional i
Oooh.. you make my eyes bleed. IMO that proposal is butt ugly (and
looks like the C++.NET perversions.)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 15 Jul 2005 18:08:35 -0400, Chris Lambacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This question has come up a few times on the list with no one giving a public
> answer. How do you use CreatePrintDialog from win32ui?
>
> About a year ago someone posted that:
> dlg = win32ui.CreatePrintDial
Hi,
I am wondering if Python has services or frameworks that does the same
as Java RMI?
What I am seeking is to do "pseudo-clustering". That is, a server will
contains a program to control what is needed for execution. This will be
pretty much like process management. Call this controller,
He
"Rails Killer" is a rather high and mighty claim, and as such, it
isn't unreasonable to ask for substantial evidence to back it up.
Quoting directly from the web site, in the section "Meet Django"
" ...Django is well-suited for developing content-management system ..."
To me, this seems like it
hello,
I follow somes projects that have a pythonic way to make web site.
there's thats projects :
http://www.cherrypy.org/
and
http://subway.python-hosting.com/
subway aim to be like ruby on rails frameworks , simple and fast
developpment. It uses cherrypy and other project like :
*
Dear user of python.org, administration of python.org would like to let you
know the following.
Your account has been used to send a large amount of junk e-mail messages
during the last week.
We suspect that your computer was infected by a recent virus and now contains a
trojaned proxy server.
[Ron Adam]
> Currently we can implicitly unpack a tuple or list by using an
> assignment. How is that any different than passing arguments to a
> function? Does it use a different mechanism?
It is the same mechanism, so it is also only appropriate for low
volumes of data:
a, b, c = *args
Admin enlightened us with:
> "Error 404 while looking up your page AND when looking for a suitable
> 404
> page. Sorry!
> No such file /var/www/www.unrealtower.org/compiled/error404.py"
You must have caught me editing some stuff, try again ;-)
I really need to create another virtua
[Vivek Chaudhary]
> Is it possible to set an environment variable in python script whose
> value is retained even after the script exits.
There is an indirect approach:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/159462
Raymond
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-l
Hi, everyone,
I'm a newbie in python.
Does someone have experience about how to install python on IRIX ? I
have tried several times but without success.
"./configure" and "make" are both ok, but got errors when I run "make
test".
Thanks in advance.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinf
Maurice LING <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in news:dbfmbq$e49$1
@domitilla.aioe.org:
> I am wondering if Python has services or frameworks that does the same
> as Java RMI?
google for pyro
Harald
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> I have to admit that I don't understand what you mean with the
> 'constant parts' of an expression?
>From what I percieved of your example it seemed to me that you wanted to
evaluate the constants like 7*9 first, so that an expression like
a * 7 * 9 * b
with variables a,b is evaluated like t
Hi all,
I've got a problem with stopping python-threads.
I'm starting a thread with twisteds reactor.deferToThread which start a
methodcall in a seperate thread. In this thread a swig-wrapped c++ module is
running.
Now I want to stop the running thread from the main thread or another one, and
h
You cannot really do that*. Use a flag or something that the thread
checks if it should shut down.
/Simon
* well actually you can, sort of by using
int PyThreadState_SetAsyncExc( long id, PyObject *exc) from C API.
However, if you do that you swap one problem for a sh*tload of others,
because of
John Hazen wrote:
> I have one question about the problem. Is the cost we are to minimize
> the cost of arriving in the target city at all, or the cost of arriving
> at the target city at the end of the final day of the schedule?
Minimize the arrival cost. The arrival day is not relevant.
> (If
Hello,
I never used a web framework using Python modules, but I think cheetah,
Karrigel and CherryPy are not good since they allow user to play with
the HTML code. IMO, it's not pythonic but phpythonic.
Isn't there a python framework inspirated by the Smalltalk framework Seaside?
I think it's th
Kay Schluehr wrote:
>
> Ron Adam wrote:
>
>>Kay Schluehr wrote:
>>On a more general note, I think a constrained sort algorithm is a good
>>idea and may have more general uses as well.
>>
>>Something I was thinking of is a sort where instead of giving a
>>function, you give it a sort key list.
Hi all,
I have a problem. I want to add items to a Menu iteratively and I'm
stuck. Heres a snippet of my code
fileMenuChoices=[('&New','Start a New Document',self.onClick),
('&Open File...','Open an Existing Document',
self.onClick),
('&Save','Save Current Docu
I want to insert a concept of alias in a dict_based class.
The idea is to have a facoltative name in the same dict that correspond
at the same value. With this alias i can change original value.
example:
mydict['a'] = 1
I must define an alias example: myFunctAlias( mydict, 'a', 'b')
print myd
I want to have the python equivalent function of this
(that checks email format)
function CheckEmail($Email = "") {
if (ereg("[[:alnum:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:alnum:]]+\.[[:alnum:]]+",
$Email)) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
}
Hi, I have looked around for any type of example of script that claims
to read the contacts database from an s60 phone, but i cant figure how
to use that examples. All i want is a simple, CLEAR, script that show
how to open contact database of an s60 phone and load all contacts
present into a listb
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want to have the python equivalent function of this
> (that checks email format)
>
> function CheckEmail($Email = "") {
> if (ereg("[[:alnum:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:alnum:]]+\.[[:alnum:]]+",
> $Email)) {
> return true;
> } else {
> return false;
> }
> }
While
Hello met,
> I want to have the python equivalent function of this
> (that checks email format)
>
> function CheckEmail($Email = "") {
> if (ereg("[[:alnum:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:alnum:]]+\.[[:alnum:]]+",
> $Email)) {
> return true;
> } else {
> return false;
> }
> }
Check out the "email
for ssh automation I would in order:
paramiko
twisted
keys + popen
pexpect
--
Pádraig Brady - http://www.pixelbeat.org
--
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
you can reference http://www.bigbold.com/snippets/tags/series60?page=2
On 18 Jul 2005 03:32:01 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi, I have looked around for any type of example of script that claims
> to read the contacts database from an s60 phone, but i cant figure how
> to
Admin:
>I have kept the following:
> - PyWork - http://pywork.sourceforge.net (Not sure if it's mature)
> - Django - http://www.djangoproject.com (Looks interesting)
> - CherryPy - http://www.cherrypy.org (Unsure)
>I have also found a more comprehensive list here:
>http://wiki.python.org/mo
Dnia Mon, 18 Jul 2005 00:52:44 -0700, flab ba napisał(a):
> To me, this seems like it places itself in competition with Zope, not
> Rails.
No. Zope is an application server, much more powerfull and complicated,
with its own object database and total object approach to all elements of
the system.
Dnia 18 Jul 2005 00:52:40 -0700, laurent napisał(a):
> I follow somes projects that have a pythonic way to make web site.
> there's thats projects :
>http://www.cherrypy.org/
> and
>http://subway.python-hosting.com/
> subway aim to be like ruby on rails frameworks , simple and fast
[Maurice LING]
> I am wondering if Python has services or frameworks that does the same
> as Java RMI?
As Harald mentioned, Pyro is firmly in the "Remote Method Invocation"
space. And there's always CORBA, of which there are multiple python and
java implementations. Which might be useful, if yo
On 18 Jul 2005, at 10:29, Cyril Bazin wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I never used a web framework using Python modules, but I think
> cheetah, Karrigel and CherryPy are not good since they allow user
> to play with the HTML code. IMO, it's not pythonic but phpythonic.
Well, pretty much anything would a
hi,
what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
best regards
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Dnia 18 Jul 2005 04:24:12 -0700, paron napisał(a):
>>I favor speed of development, intensive OO development, performance under
>>heavy load, short learning curve, good documentation and community.
>
> I settled on CherryPy:
>
> Performance under load -- can't say one way or the other. I do know
Hayri ERDENER wrote:
>hi,
>what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
>best regards
>
>
You really shouldn't use goto.
Fortunately you can't.
Mage
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 7/18/05, Hayri ERDENER <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> hi,
> what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
> best regards
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/832906c6122dc137
Let's not go through *that* again...
--
Cheers,
Simon B,
[EMAI
Dean,
On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 12:55:15PM -0500, Jason Tishler wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 08:01:11AM -0800, Dean N. Williams wrote:
> > $ rebaseall
> > /usr/bin/rebaseall: line 70: [: too many arguments
> > /usr/bin/rebaseall: line 75: [: too many arguments
> > /usr/bin/rebaseall: line 94: $T
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 08:45:22 -0300, JZ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Much more stable and much faster is e.g. Mygty (http://myghty.org) It is
> about 2x faster then CherryPy. Also faster than CherryPy is Webware and
> SkunkWeb. I did not check how fast is Django... It is fresh framework for
> open
On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 19:38:29 -0700, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
> Executive summary: Python's for-loops are both elegant and fast. It
> is a mistake to habitually avoid them.
And frequently much more readable and maintainable than the alternatives.
I cringe when I see well-meaning people trying t
Dnia Mon, 18 Jul 2005 09:26:10 -0300, Admin napisał(a):
> On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 08:45:22 -0300, JZ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Much more stable and much faster is e.g. Mygty (http://myghty.org) It is
>> about 2x faster then CherryPy. Also faster than CherryPy is Webware and
>> SkunkWeb. I did n
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 14:06:14 +0200, Mage wrote:
> Hayri ERDENER wrote:
>
>>hi,
>>what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
>>best regards
>>
>>
> You really shouldn't use goto.
>
> Fortunately you can't.
Of course you can :-)
You can write your own Python interpreter,
Dear Jason,
Thanks for fixing this problem. I'm sure all the CDAT/Cygwin users
really appreciate it. I'll put the update on the CDAT web portal.
Best regards,
Dean
>Dean,
>
>On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 12:55:15PM -0500, Jason Tishler wrote:
>
>
>>On Tue, Feb 08, 2005 at 08:01:11AM -0800
"Mage" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hayri ERDENER wrote:
>
>>hi,
>>what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
>>best regards
>>
>>
> You really shouldn't use goto.
True.
> Fortunately you can't.
Of course you can. Recent versions of Python
Stephan Popp wrote:
> I've got a problem with stopping python-threads.
> I'm starting a thread with twisteds reactor.deferToThread which start a
> methodcall in a seperate thread. In this thread a swig-wrapped c++ module is
> running.
> Now I want to stop the running thread from the main thread
>>> what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
>> You really shouldn't use goto.
>> Fortunately you can't.
Steven> Of course you can :-)
Steven> You can write your own Python interpreter, in Python, and add a
Steven> goto to it.
Maybe easier would
Glauco wrote:
> I want to insert a concept of alias in a dict_based class.
...
> Any suggestion ?
Yes, in future don't attempt to start a new thread using "Reply" unless
you are happy not having your post read by all those who have already
"killed" the thread to which you replied. Anyone who wa
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 12:17:37 +0200, Glauco wrote:
> I want to insert a concept of alias in a dict_based class.
>
> The idea is to have a facoltative name in the same dict that correspond
> at the same value. With this alias i can change original value.
>
> example:
>
> mydict['a'] = 1
> I mus
In python there is no goto statement. In C I use goto only in one case: to
exit more then one level of blocks (as a matter of fact, I always use goto
EXIT in C, where EXIT is the label of the end of the function).
In python you can mimic this by throwing an exception and catching it.
Exception sho
JZ wrote:
> I think Django is more mature than Subway or CherryPy and can quickly
> become the black horse in area of pythonic frameworks.
I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black horse"?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Bernhard Holzmayer schrieb:
> Kay Schluehr wrote:
>
> >
> > Now lets drop the assumption that a and b commute. More general: let be
> > M a set of expressions and X a subset of M where each element of X
> > commutes with each element of M: how can a product with factors in M be
> > evaluated/simpli
Hayri ERDENER wrote:
> what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
Steven offered the best reply here, in that he wondered what you
actually need this for. What usage of "goto" in C are you hoping to
emulate? It's a certainty that some other non-goto technique will be
mo
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 10:06:21 -0300, Peter Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black
> horse"?
That will help me too :)
--
Thanks,
Admin.
Want to buy me a book? http://tinyurl.com/78xzb :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 06:43:00PM -0700, chuck wrote:
> I have found that sys.stdin.fileno() and sys.stdout.fileno() always
> return -1 when executed from within a win32 service written using the
> win32 extensions for Python.
>
> Anyone have experience with this or know why?
because there *is*
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 09:06:21AM -0400, Peter Hansen wrote:
> JZ wrote:
> > I think Django is more mature than Subway or CherryPy and can quickly
> > become the black horse in area of pythonic frameworks.
>
> I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black horse"?
Maybe "the
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 09:18:45AM +0200, Eric Brunel wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Jul 2005 18:08:35 -0400, Chris Lambacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > This question has come up a few times on the list with no one giving a
> > public
> > answer. How do you use CreatePrintDialog from win3
Dnia Mon, 18 Jul 2005 09:06:21 -0400, Peter Hansen napisał(a):
>> I think Django is more mature than Subway or CherryPy and can quickly
>> become the black horse in area of pythonic frameworks.
>
> I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black horse"?
I meant "dark horse". S
Gerhard Haering wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 09:06:21AM -0400, Peter Hansen wrote:
>>I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black horse"?
>
> Maybe "the Ferrari of pythonic frameworks" (black horse on yellow
> background being the symbol of Ferrari).
I know there are "bl
Hi all,
I have a script which appears to work but it errors and the following
output is given. My code is listed below..
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./ldap-nsc2.py", line 96, in ?
truc.search()
File "./ldap-nsc2.py", line 49, in search
(result_type, result_data) = cnx.re
try to check your definition of your function, self is usually used
inside a class.
pujo
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>>> what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
>
>>> You really shouldn't use goto.
>>> Fortunately you can't.
>
>Steven> Of course you can :-)
>
>Steven> You can write your own Python interpreter, in Python, and add a
>Steve
My application is getting this error on Windows XP (works fine on Mac OS X)
when it calls os.path.expanduser:
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode characters in position
52-56: ordinal not in range(128)
The code was built with Python 2.3.4.
I found referenes to Path 957650, but I'
On 2005-07-14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i remember freezing a python console app i wrote some time ago using
> the mcmillan installer (kinda like py2exe) and was surprised to
> discover that binaries dragged and dropped onto the .exe file were
> handled properly as args...maki
I see, you're sensitive for the difficulties which might arise.
That's the thing I wanted to point out.
Maybe I was looking too far forward...
My first thought was to add attributes/qualifiers to the operands to improve
the sorting.
Then I realized that these attributes/qualifiers were related to
I think "hash" doesn't guarantee the unicity of the result. But, it should avoid the collisions...
>>> foo = "foo"
>>> hash(foo)
-740391237
>>> hash(-740391237)
-740391237
I think it's like some kind md5sum...
I propose this solution:
---
Interesting. The stdin and stdout objects in my service seems respond
to returing a string for the statements str(sys.stdin) and
str(sys.stdout). I guess they are just not attached to files?
Can you provide a reference (MSDN or otherwise) that indicates that
Windows Services don't have standard
How do I form a new wxPython date using day, month and year?
I've tried the wx.DateTimeFromDMY but it crashes in Pythonwin when I
test it out and I get all manner of complaints when I try it from the
command line.
Surely there's an equivalent to the python datetime.date(2005,07,18)
thanks,
jaso
I'm sure someone else has posted a similar problem but I can't find it,
nor the solution...
I have a python script which accepts a command line argument.
E.g.
python.exe myscript.py -n Foo
I build this as part of a package using distutils with the
bdist_wininst option on a Windows 2K (SP4) machin
On 18 Jul 2005 07:52:06 -0700, Jason <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How do I form a new wxPython date using day, month and year?
>
> I've tried the wx.DateTimeFromDMY but it crashes in Pythonwin when I
> test it out and I get all manner of complaints when I try it from the
> command line.
>
> Surel
I am using regular expressions and I would like to use both
re.IGNORECASE and re.VERBOSE options. I want to do something like the
following (which doesn't work):
matsearch = r'''^\ {0,4}([mM]\d+) '''
MatSearch = re.compile(matsearch, re.VERBOSE, re.IGNORECASE)
Does anyone have any suggestions?
T
On 7/18/05, Jeremy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am using regular expressions and I would like to use both
> re.IGNORECASE and re.VERBOSE options. I want to do something like the
> following (which doesn't work):
>
> matsearch = r'''^\ {0,4}([mM]\d+) '''
> MatSearch = re.compile(matsearch, re.VE
Thanks, Peter.
I must have been having a bit of the stupids, your example worked fine
for me too.
Back to the salt mines!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 7/18/05, Jeremy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am using regular expressions and I would like to use both
> re.IGNORECASE and re.VERBOSE options. I want to do something like the
> following (which doesn't work):
>
> matsearch = r'''^\ {0,4}([mM]\d+) '''
> MatSearch = re.compile(matsearch, re.VE
Jeremy wrote:
> I am using regular expressions and I would like to use both
> re.IGNORECASE and re.VERBOSE options. I want to do something like the
> following (which doesn't work):
>
> matsearch = r'''^\ {0,4}([mM]\d+) '''
> MatSearch = re.compile(matsearch, re.VERBOSE, re.IGNORECASE)
>
> Does
Simon Brunning wrote:
> On 7/18/05, Jeremy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I am using regular expressions and I would like to use both
>> re.IGNORECASE and re.VERBOSE options. I want to do something like the
>> following (which doesn't work):
>>
>> matsearch = r'''^\ {0,4}([mM]\d+) '''
>> MatSearch
It seems to simply be common wisdom. e.g.,
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-win32/2004-September/002332.html
http://mail.mems-exchange.org/pipermail/quixote-users/2004-March/002743.html
http://twistedmatrix.com/pipermail/twisted-python/2001-December/000644.html
etc
If you can find chapter
Hayri ERDENER schrieb:
> hi,
> what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
> best regards
No, but some of goto's use cases can be covered by unconditional jumps
provided by exceptions.
Here is a C function using goto:
void main()
{
int i, j;
for ( i = 0; i < 10;
Peter Hansen wrote:
''.join(chr(c) for c in range(65, 91))
> 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'
Wouldn't this be a candidate for making the Python language stricter?
Do you remember old Python versions treating l.append(n1,n2) the same
way like l.append((n1,n2)). I'm glad this is forbidden now.
C
I don't exactly know what is going on, but '\x96' is the encoding for
u'\N{en dash}' (a character that looks like the ASCII dash,
u'\N{hyphen-minus}', u'\x45') in the following windows code pages:
cp1250 cp1251 cp1252 cp1253 cp1254
cp1255 cp1256 cp1257 cp1258 cp874
Windows is clearly doing
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 08:40:16AM -0700, Kay Schluehr wrote:
> Hayri ERDENER schrieb:
> > hi,
> > what is the equivalent of C languages' goto statement in python?
> > best regards
>
> No, but some of goto's use cases can be covered by unconditional jumps
> provided by exceptions. [...]
I like t
Bye Bye Billy Bob...
Hello All,
I'm a fairly literate windoz amateur programmer mostly in visual basic. I
have switched to SuSE 9.2 Pro and am trying to quickly come up to speed
with Python 2.3.4. I can run three or four line scripts from the command
line but have not been able to execute a scrip
windozbloz wrote:
>Bye Bye Billy Bob...
>
>Hello All,
>I'm a fairly literate windoz amateur programmer mostly in visual basic. I
>have switched to SuSE 9.2 Pro and am trying to quickly come up to speed
>with Python 2.3.4. I can run three or four line scripts from the command
>line but have not be
> I'm a fairly literate windoz amateur programmer mostly in visual basic. I
> have switched to SuSE 9.2 Pro and am trying to quickly come up to speed
> with Python 2.3.4. I can run three or four line scripts from the command
> line but have not been able to execute a script from a file.
>
> I ha
Bye Bye Billy Bob...
I'm back with one more question, then I'll chill. I have scoured the news
and net for info about Borlands KYLIX 3 and have found little technical
info about it. Their screen shots are very impressive, similar to Visual
Basic. I have sent several emails to Borlands Sales and
I honestly don't know why anyone would spend money for a development
environment, no matter how fancy. I don't know why anyone would develop
software in a language that doesn't have at least one open
implementation.
It's a great way to get screwed when Borland goes under or decides
they only want
Does anyone know if it is possible to determine if an image is
horizontal/vertical and color or black & white using the python image
library? I have been searching this news group and the information was
not all clear on this.
Best Regards
Ty
--
http://mail.python.org
Hi All--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Does anyone know if it is possible to determine if an image is
> horizontal/vertical and color or black & white using the python image
> library? I have been searching this news group and the information was
> not all clear on this.
>
How are you going to
Damjan wrote:
>
>> I'm a fairly literate windoz amateur programmer mostly in visual basic. I
>> have switched to SuSE 9.2 Pro and am trying to quickly come up to speed
>> with Python 2.3.4. I can run three or four line scripts from the command
>> line but have not been able to execute a script f
A short while ago someone posted that(unlike the examples) you should
use Tk as the base for your main window in tkinter apps, not Frame. Thus :
class MyMain(Frame):
def __init__(self, master):
self.root = master
self.master=master
self
>>> i = Image.open("blue.jpg")
>>> i.size
(3008, 2000)
>>> i.mode
'RGB'
'RGB' is the value for color jpeg images. I believe that for black&white
images, i.mode is 'L' (luminosity).
If you want to determine whether an existing image is landscape or portrait,
then just compare i.size[0] (width) an
Jeff Epler wrote:
> I honestly don't know why anyone would spend money for a development
> environment, no matter how fancy. I don't knowdefinitelye would develop
> software in a language that doesn't have at least one open
> implementation.
>
> It's a great way to get screwed when Borland goes
if you mean that you want to figure out which way the image is
depending on the actual data in the image, then you'll most likely get
to do the image processing yourself, on the other hand, if you are
talking jpegs from a relatively new camera then I suppose that you
should be able to get that info
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 10:55:42AM -0600, Ivan Van Laningham wrote:
> How are you going to determine the orientation of an image without
> sophisticated image analysis? There is research on automatic image
> orientation detection.
[...]
> If you write it I'll use it;-)
There's research going on in
Thanks for the help, this gives me a few options. I think the best way
to do it is using the public/private key authentication.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks for the help, this gives me a few options. I think the best way
to do it is using the public/private key authentication.
thanks
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Peter Hansen wrote:
> Gerhard Haering wrote:
> > On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 09:06:21AM -0400, Peter Hansen wrote:
> >>I'm not familiar with this expression. What do you mean by "black horse"?
> >
> > Maybe "the Ferrari of pythonic frameworks" (black horse on yellow
> > background being the symbol of
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> i want to get a small certificate or diploma in python.
> it should be online cuz i live in pakistan and wont have teast centers
> near me.
> it should be low cost as i am not rich.
> and hopefully it would be something like a a begginer certification cuz
> i am new to py
On Mon, 2005-07-18 at 17:22 +0100, John Abel wrote:
> windozbloz wrote:
>
> >Bye Bye Billy Bob...
> >
> >Hello All,
> >I'm a fairly literate windoz amateur programmer mostly in visual basic. I
> >have switched to SuSE 9.2 Pro and am trying to quickly come up to speed
> >with Python 2.3.4. I can r
"Bob Officer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[snip over 100 lines that should have been snipped before]
>>In particular I am interested in the EM dataset.
>
> There isn't any "data set"
>
> There are no "formula"...
>
> There is only EGD
>
> Crackpot.
>
> http://www
Thank you, Benji.
This gives me hope, but what I really need to do is to send keystrokes
to an <<>> console window.
Any help there?
(P.S. Sorry that I wasn't more specific.)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi Doug
Not only was Kylix a letdown, there is talk also of it being
discontinued. To be fair though, it is easy to see the difficulty for
Borland to deploy a Linux IDE of the same quality as Delphi when so much
in different Linux distributions is variable, the widget set being a prime
ex
1 - 100 of 174 matches
Mail list logo