On Mon, 2009-02-23 at 19:22 +, Gary Wood wrote:
'''exercise to complete and test this function'''
import string
def joinStrings(items):
'''Join all the strings in stringList into one string,
and return the result. For example:
print joinStrings(['very', 'hot', 'day'])
On Tue, 2009-02-24 at 11:05 -0800, zaheer.ag...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Is there any Python equivalent of java jar,can I include all my
sources,properties file etc into a single file.Is there anyway in
Python that I can run like the following
java -jar Mytest.jar --startwebserver
How to
On Wed, 2009-02-25 at 17:56 +0530, aditya saurabh wrote:
I defined two functions - lets say
fa = lambda x: 2*x
fb = lambda x: 3*x
Now I would like to use fa*fb in terms of x
is there a way?
Thanks in advance
I'm not sure what use fa*fb in terms of x means.
But if you mean fa(x) * fb(x)
On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 13:48 -0800, Jesse Aldridge wrote:
I have one module called foo.py
-
class Foo:
foo = None
def get_foo():
return Foo.foo
if __name__ == __main__:
import bar
Foo.foo = foo
bar.go()
-
And another one
On Tue, 2009-03-03 at 13:41 -0600, nuwandame wrote:
What I am wanting to do is execute code whenever a property of a class
object has been changed.
i.e.
class test:
testproperty = None
bob = test()
bob.testproperty = 'something'
So, when bob.testproperty is set to a new
On Fri, 2009-03-06 at 23:57 -0800, Paul Rubin wrote:
alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com writes:
But _you_ only _just_ stated It does have some (generally small)
performance ramifications as
well and provided timing examples to show it. Without qualification.
The performance difference can be large
On Sat, 2009-03-07 at 03:07 -0500, Albert Hopkins wrote:
On Fri, 2009-03-06 at 23:57 -0800, Paul Rubin wrote:
alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com writes:
But _you_ only _just_ stated It does have some (generally small)
performance ramifications as
well and provided timing examples to show
Yep...as documented[1], even a raw string cannot end in an odd number
of backslashes.
So how do you explain this?
r'a\'b'
a\\'b
That doesn't end in an odd number of backslashes.
Python is __repr__esenting a raw string as a regular string.
Literally they are equivalent:
On Thu, 2009-03-12 at 13:25 -0700, Chris Rebert wrote:
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 1:07 PM, Sam Ettessoc sami...@gmail.com wrote:
I would like to share a benchmark I did. The computer used was a
2160MHz Intel Core Duo w/ 2000MB of 667MHz DDR2 SDRAM running MAC OS
10.5.6 and a lots of software
On Thu, 2009-03-12 at 12:57 -0700, IanR wrote:
I'm processing RSS content from a # of given sources. Most of the
time the url given by the RSS feed redirects to the real URL (I'm
guessing they do this for tracking purposes)
For example.
This is a url that I get from and RSS feed,
On Fri, 2009-03-13 at 21:01 +, tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I've had this trouble before, how do I find the details of how in
works in the documentation. E.g. the details of:-
if string in bigstring:
It gets a mention in the if section but not a lot.
From
On Fri, 2009-03-13 at 21:04 +, tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
What's the neatest way to do the following in case insensitive fashion:-
if stringA in stringB:
bla bla bla
I know I can just do:-
if stringA.lower() in stringB.lower():
bla bla bla
But I was
On Wed, 2009-03-18 at 16:58 -0700, Mike314 wrote:
Hello,
I have following code:
def test_func(val):
print type(val)
test_func(val=('val1'))
test_func(val=('val1', 'val2'))
The output is quite different:
type 'str'
type 'tuple'
Why I have string in the first case?
You
On Thu, 2009-03-19 at 08:42 -0700, Emanuele D'Arrigo wrote:
Hi everybody,
I just had a bit of a shiver for something I'm doing often in my code
but that might be based on a wrong assumption on my part. Take the
following code:
pattern = aPattern
compiledPatterns = [ ]
On Thu, 2009-03-19 at 11:57 -0500, Jim Garrison wrote:
Use case: parsing a simple config file line where lines start with a
keyword and have optional arguments. I want to extract the keyword and
then pass the rest of the line to a function to process it. An obvious
use of split(None,1)
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 07:25 +1100, Jervis Whitley wrote:
if stringA.lower() in stringB.lower():
bla bla bla
from string import lower
if lower(stringA) in lower(stringB):
# was this what you were after?
This is analogous to standing behind a perfectly
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 08:52 +1100, Jervis Whitley wrote:
On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 8:28 AM, Albert Hopkins mar...@letterboxes.org
wrote:
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 07:25 +1100, Jervis Whitley wrote:
if stringA.lower() in stringB.lower():
bla bla bla
from string import
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 07:16 -0700, Alexzive wrote:
Hello there,
I'd like to get the same result of set() but getting an indexable
object.
How to get this in an efficient way?
Example using set
A = [1, 2, 2 ,2 , 3 ,4]
B= set(A)
B = ([1, 2, 3, 4])
B[2]
TypeError: unindexable
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 07:42 -0700, Esmail wrote:
Hi all,
I've been reading/posting to usenet since the 80s with a variety of
tools (vn, and most recently Thunderbird) but since my ISP
(TimeWarner) no longer provides usenet feeds I'm stuck.
I am not crazy about the web interface via google
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 07:54 -0700, thomasvang...@gmail.com wrote:
You could use:
B=list(set(A)).sort()
Hope that helps.
Which will assign None to B.
sorted(list(... or B.sort() is probably what you meant.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 12:59 -0700, Brendan Miller wrote:
I have a python application that I want to package up and deploy to
various people using RHEL 4.
I'm using python 2.6 to develop the app. The RHEL 4 machines have an
older version of python I'd rather not code against (although that's
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 22:14 -0400, Colin J. Williams wrote:
Below is a test script:
# tSubProcess.py
import subprocess
import sys
try:
v= subprocess.Popen('ftype
py=C:\Python25\Python.exe')
except WindowsError:
print(sys.exc_info())
Here is the output:
*** Python 2.5.4
On Sat, 2009-03-21 at 17:41 -0700, Randy Turner wrote:
Hi,
I was reading a book on Python-3 programming recently and the book
stated that, while there is an __init__ method for initializing
objects, there was a __del__ method but the __del__ method is not
guaranteed to be called when an
On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 15:55 +, Sean wrote:
Anyone got any thoughts about what to use as a replacement. I need
something (like bsddb) which uses dictionary syntax to read and write an
underlying (fast!) btree or similar.
gdbm
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Also, instead of caching exceptions you can do lazy lookups kinda like
this:
-
# a.py
class A:
pass
-
# b.py
class B:
On Wed, 2009-03-25 at 21:26 +, Martin P. Hellwig wrote:
PEP 8 recommends the latter.
Raymond
I can't seem to find where this recommendation is mentioned or implied.
Wow, you must not have looked very hard:
1. Point your browser to http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
On Thu, 2009-03-26 at 08:36 -0700, Edd Barrett wrote:
Hi there,
My first post here, so hello :)
Just a little background, I am writing my dissertation, which is a JIT
compiler based upon LLVM and it's python bindings, along with the
aperiot LL(1) parser.
I have some code here, which is
On Thu, 2009-03-26 at 12:22 -0700, paul.scipi...@aps.com wrote:
Hello,
I'm a newbie to Python. I have a list which contains integers (about
80,000). I want to find a quick way to get the numbers that occur in
the list more than once, and how many times that number is duplicated
in the
On Thu, 2009-03-26 at 15:54 -0400, Albert Hopkins wrote:
[...]
$ cat test.py
from random import randint
l = list()
for i in xrange(8):
l.append(randint(0,10))
^^^
should have been:
l.append(randint(0,9))
hist = dict()
for i in l:
hist[i
On Thu, 2009-03-26 at 15:23 -0700, harijay wrote:
Hi
I want to run shell scripts of the following kind from inside python
and for some reason either the os.system or the subprocess.call ways
are not working for me .
I am calling a fortran command (f2mtz ) with some keyworded input that
is
On Fri, 2009-03-27 at 10:47 -0700, Aahz wrote:
In article mailman.2787.1238174158.11746.python-l...@python.org,
andrew cooke and...@acooke.org wrote:
Aahz wrote:
Excuse me? What decline of this newsgroup?
Hmmm. It's hard to respond to this without implicitly criticising others
here,
On Fri, 2009-03-27 at 17:55 -0700, rui.li.s...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
anyone can give a simple example or a link on how to use 'drop' with
pyqt.
what I'm looking for is drop a file to main widget then program get
the path\filename
something like: main_widget set to accept 'drop event',
On Fri, 2009-03-27 at 21:15 -0400, andrew cooke wrote:
[...]
c.l.python used to be the core of a community built around a language. It
no longer is. It is a very useful place, where some very helpful and
knowledgeable people hang out and give advice, but instead of representing
the full
On Sun, 2009-03-29 at 11:35 +0100, taliesin wrote:
Hi,
I'm probably being very dense so apologies in advance, but I can't find
any decent documentation for the psycopg module for PostgreSQL interfacing.
Google and Yahoo don't seem to return much for any of the queries I gave
them and
On Sun, 2009-03-29 at 15:17 +0200, Andrea Francia wrote:
Do you know/use Unipath?
Unipath is a OO path manipulation library. It's used, for example, to
rename, copy, deleting files.
Unfortunately this library is no more available as I reported in [1].
I found a copy of the .egg in a my
On Mon, 2009-03-30 at 11:05 -0500, Zach Goscha wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to call an unbound method (Map.Background) but getting the
following error:
TypeError: unbound method background() must be called with Map
instance as first argument (got nothing instead)
Here is some of the
On Wed, 2009-04-01 at 12:17 -0700, mynthon wrote:
Hi!
I need help. I don't understand what doc says.
I load module from path testmod/mytest.py using imp.load_source(). My
code is
import imp
testmod = imp.load_source('koko', 'testmod/mytest.py)
print testmod
but i don't understand
On Sat, 2009-04-04 at 03:56 -0700, Sreejith K wrote:
Python's statvfs module contains the following indexes to use with
os.statvfs() that contains the specified information
statvfs.F_BSIZE
Preferred file system block size.
statvfs.F_FRSIZE
Fundamental file system block size.
On Sat, 2009-04-04 at 15:48 +0200, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com writes:
Python's statvfs module contains the following indexes to use with
os.statvfs() that contains the specified information
statvfs.F_BSIZE
Preferred file system block size.
[...]
On Tue, 2009-04-07 at 07:53 -0400, Dave Angel wrote:
subprocess.Popen() is expecting the name of a program, which should
normally have an extension of .exe You're handing it a .bat file,
which is not executable. It only executes in the context of a command
interpreter (shell), such
On Wed, 2009-04-08 at 12:01 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
Gilles Ganault wrote:
I'd like to go through a list of e-mail addresses, and extract those
that belong to well-known ISP's. For some reason I can't figure out,
Python shows the whole list instead of just e-mails that match:
On Wed, 2009-04-08 at 19:47 +0100, Dale Amon wrote:
There are a number of things which I have been used
to doing in other OO languages which I have not yet
figured out how to do in Python, the most important
of which is passing method names as args and inserting
them into method calls. Here
On Wed, 2009-04-08 at 23:51 +0200, Emma Li wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to do compression/decompression of stuff with zlib, and I
just don't get it...
Here is an example. I assume that dec should be a, but it isn't. dec
turns out to be an empty string, and I don't understand why...
On Sun, 2009-04-12 at 04:00 +, John O'Hagan wrote:
Hi,
I was getting some surprising false positives as a result of not expecting
this:
all(element in item for item in iterable)
to return True when 'iterable' is empty.
I guess it goes into hairy Boolean territory trying to
This issue may have been referred to in
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] but I didn't
entirely understand the explanation. Basically I have this:
a = float(6)
b = float('nan')
min(a, b)
6.0
min(b, a)
nan
max(a, b)
6.0
max(b, a)
nan
Before I did not know
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 20:16:18 -0800, Paddy wrote:
I am definitely NOT a floating point expert, but I did find this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_754r#min_and_max
P.S. What platform /Compiler are you using for Python?
Linux with GCC 4
-a
--
On Mon, 2008-11-17 at 10:27 -0800, CarlFK wrote:
I need some code that will read in grubs menu.lst file, and give me a
list of dicts:
[{'title':'Ubuntu, kernel 2.6.15-23-686',
'root':'(hd0,0)',
'kernel':'/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.15-23-686 root=/dev/hda1 ro quiet splash',
On Mon, 2008-11-17 at 13:59 -0800, godavemon wrote:
I'm using urllib2 to pull pages for a custom version of a web proxy
and am having issues with 404 errors. Urllib2 does a great job of
letting me know that a 404 happened with the following code.
import urllib2
url =
On Mon, 2008-11-17 at 15:27 -0800, rowen wrote:
I'd like to replace some shell scripts with Python, but one step of
the script modifies my environment in a way that the subsequent steps
require.
A simple translation to a few lines of subprocess.call(...) fails
because the first call
On Tue, 2008-11-18 at 04:36 -0800, gaurav kashyap wrote:
Hi all,
I have a text file in a directory on unix system.
Using a python program i want to change that file's permissions.
How could this be done.
Thanks
os.chmod = chmod(...)
chmod(path, mode)
Change the access
On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 16:10 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What I'm trying to do is decompress a bunch of files depending on the
date/time specified.
So, we have full backups created every Sunday and transaction backups
every hour afterwards.
I have everything compressed at an hourly
On Wed, 2008-11-26 at 11:11 -0800, Nan wrote:
Hello,
I just started to use Python. I wrote the following code and
expected 'main' would be called.
def main():
print hello
main
But I was wrong. I have to use 'main()' to invoke main. The python
interpreter does not give any
On Sat, 2008-11-29 at 12:32 -0800, Adam E wrote:
I have read in my copy of Programming Python that all strings will be
Unicode and there will be a byte type.
This is mentally keeping me from upgrading to 2.6 .
Care to explain?
Actually what you describe is a change change takes place in
On Sat, 2008-11-29 at 20:39 +, Durand wrote:
Hi,
I've got this weird problem where in some strings, parts of the string
are in hexadecimal, or thats what I think they are. I'm not exactly
sure...I get something like this: 's\x08 \x08Test!' from parsing a log
file. From what I found
On Sun, 2008-11-30 at 02:18 +0100, Stef Mientki wrote:
First, you must understand that this is an extremelly dangerous
question to ask on a public newsgroup (expecially regarding the first
and the third in the series). Wars have began over this. Many people
were harmed in those wars. Many
This has nothing to do with Python. Please take this thread to
cares.who.someone.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 2008-12-03 at 13:38 -0800, Warren DeLano wrote:
A bottom line / pragmatic question... hopefully not a FAQ.
Why was it necessary to make as a reserved keyword?
And more to the point, why was it necessary to prevent developers from
being able to refer to attributes named as?
On Thu, 2008-12-04 at 20:01 +0100, Дамјан Георгиевски wrote:
I don't think it matters. Here's a quick comparison between 2.5 and
3.0 on a relatively small 17 meg file:
C:\c:\Python30\python -m timeit -n 1
open('C:\\work\\temp\\bppd_vsub.csv', 'rb').read()
1 loops, best of 3: 36.8 sec
It's been a while so I can't remember, but it seems like yield was
dropped in to python relatively quickly in 2.2. Was there a similar
outrage when yield became a keyword?
-a
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, 2008-12-06 at 04:03 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'd like to insert Multiple Records Using One Insert Statement
inserting one record using one insert statement works
this is the example:
import MySQLdb
conn = MySQLdb.connect(host=localhost,.)
cursore = conn.cursor()
I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
def myfunction():
# do some stuff stuff
my_string = function_that_returns_string()
# do some stuff with my_string
del my_string
# do some other stuff
Say I have module foo.py:
def a(x):
def b():
x
del x
If I run foo.py under Python 2.4.4 I get:
File foo.py, line 4
del x
SyntaxError: can not delete variable 'x' referenced in nested
scope
Under Python
On Tue, 2008-12-09 at 20:56 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
Actually I noticed a tendency from open-source projects to have slow
increment of version number, while proprietary projects usually have
big
version numbers.
Linux 2.x: 1991 Python 3.x.x: 1991. Apache 2.0: 1995. OpenOffice.org
3.0:
On Tue, 2008-12-09 at 22:57 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
[...]
So is there a way to find the offending code w/o having to go
through
every line of code in 'foo' by hand?
Just search for del x in your code. Your editor does have a search
function, surely?
Well, you'd think I'd be
On Fri, 2008-12-19 at 06:34 -0800, Alex wrote:
Hi,
I have a Pyhon GUI application that launches subprocess.
I would like to read the subprocess' stdout as it is being produced
(show it in GUI), without hanging the GUI.
I guess threading will solve the no-hanging issue, but as far as I
On Tue, 2008-12-23 at 13:18 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
On Tue, 23 Dec 2008 11:50:59 +0100, Qian Xu wrote:
Hello All,
Is it possible to print something to console without a line break?
I tried:
sys.stdout.write(Testing something ...) // nothing will be printed
time.sleep(1)
On Tue, 2008-12-30 at 11:31 -0800, wx1...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a list and would like to parse the list appending each list
item to the end of a variable on a new line.
for instance
mylist = ['something\n', 'another something\n', 'something again\n']
then parse mylist to make it
On Tue, 2009-01-06 at 11:23 -0800, rcmn wrote:
I'm not sure how to call it sorry for the subject description.
Here what i'm trying to accomplish.
the script i'm working on, take a submitted list (for line in file)
and generate thread for it. unfortunately winxp has a limit of 500
thread .
On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 16:46 -0600, da...@bag.python.org wrote:
Can find nothing in the on-line docs or a book.
Groping in the dark I attempted :
script24
import io
io.open('stdprn','w') # accepted
stdprn.write('hello printer') # fails stdprn is not defined
You
On Sat, 2009-01-10 at 17:12 +, David Shi wrote:
I am looking for an efficient Python script to download and save
a .zip file programmatically (from http or https call).
Regards.
David
urllib?
-a
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 2009-01-12 at 19:51 +0100, TP wrote:
Hi everybody,
I try to modify locals() as an exercise.
According to the context (function or __main__), it works differently (see
below). Why? Thanks
Julien
Per the locals() documentation @
http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html
On Tue, 2009-01-13 at 16:13 +0100, TP wrote:
Hi everybody,
Try the following program:
def f():
def f_nested():
exec a=2
print a
f()
It yields an error.
$ python nested_exec.py
File nested_exec.py, line 3
exec
On Tue, 2009-01-13 at 08:59 -0800, bruce wrote:
Hi..
quite new to python, and have a couple of basic question:
i have
(term:[1,2,3])
as i understand it, this is a list, yes/no?
No, that's invalid syntax:
(term:[1,2,3])
File stdin, line 1
On Tue, 2009-01-13 at 12:02 -0800, Santiago Romero wrote:
Hi.
Until now, all my python programs worked with text files. But now I'm
porting an small old C program I wrote lot of years ago to python and
I'm having problems with datatypes (I think).
some C code:
fp = fopen( file, rb);
On Wed, 2009-01-14 at 16:58 +1000, James Mills wrote:
[...]
Still I would avoid using this idiom altogether
and jsut stick with default values. For Example:
FOO = 1
def f(x=FOO):
...
Use this instead:
def f(x=1):
...
That only works well when 1 is only used once, and as an
On Wed, 2009-02-04 at 13:40 +0200, Noam Aigerman wrote:
Hi All,
I have a script in which I receive a list of functions. I iterate over
the list and run each function. This functions are created by some other
user who is using the lib I wrote. Now, there are some cases in which
the function I
On Thu, 2009-02-05 at 10:04 -0800, bearophileh...@lycos.com wrote:
This comes after a small discussion in another Python newsgroup.
Haskell supports a where clause, that's syntactic sugar that allows
you to define things like this:
p = a / b
where
a = 20 / len(c)
b = foo(d)
Probably that [c.l.]python is becoming more popular and, like most
things as they become popular, it loses its purity... much like the
Internet in the early 1990s.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, 2009-02-07 at 17:12 +, rdmur...@bitdance.com wrote:
I've googled and looked through os.path, but I don't see a method for
determining if a path points to a FIFO. Anyone know of a simple way to
do so?
import os
import stat
st_mode = os.stat(path)[0]
isfifo = stat.S_ISFIFO(st_mode)
On Tue, 2009-02-10 at 11:15 -0800, Josh Dukes wrote:
quite simply...what???
In [108]: bool([ x for x in range(10) if False ])
Out[108]: False
In [109]: bool( x for x in range(10) if False )
Out[109]: True
Why do these two evaluate differently? I was expecting that they would
evaluate
On Tue, 2009-02-10 at 12:50 -0800, Josh Dukes wrote:
The thing I don't understand is why a generator that has no iterable
values is different from an empty list. Why shouldn't bool ==
has_value?? Technically a list, a tuple, and a string are also objects
but if they lack values they're
On Wed, 2009-02-11 at 10:35 -0800, jeffg wrote:
Having issue on Windows cmd.
Python.exe
a = u'\xf0'
print a
This gives a unicode error.
Works fine in IDLE, PythonWin, and my Macbook but I need to run this
from a windows batch.
Character should look like this ð.
Please help!
You
On Sat, 2009-02-14 at 07:45 -0700, Linuxguy123 wrote:
Excuse my ignorance, but is there a limit to the size of function names
in Python ?
I named a function getSynclientVersion() and I got an error when I
called it.
You forgot to paste the error.
--
On Tue, 2009-02-17 at 19:46 +0530, Deepak Rokade wrote:
Yes I can do that but for that I will have to go through entire list
of files and also I will have to first get the whole list of files
present in directory.
In case of my application this list can be huge and so want to list
the
On Thu, 2009-02-19 at 10:55 -0800, Ron Garret wrote:
I'm trying to split a CamelCase string into its constituent components.
This kind of works:
re.split('[a-z][A-Z]', 'fooBarBaz')
['fo', 'a', 'az']
but it consumes the boundary characters. To fix this I tried using
lookahead and
On Sun, 2009-02-22 at 11:44 -0800, Ravi wrote:
The following code didn't work:
class X(object):
def f(self, **kwds):
print kwds
try:
print kwds['i'] * 2
except KeyError:
print unknown
On Sun, 2009-02-22 at 12:09 -0800, Ravi wrote:
I am sorry about the typo mistake, well the code snippets are as:
# Non Working:
class X(object):
def f(self, **kwds):
print kwds
try:
print kwds['i'] * 2
except KeyError:
print unknown keyword argument
self.g(string,
On Sun, 2009-02-22 at 16:15 -0800, James Pearson wrote:
I've been using irclib to write a simple irc bot, and I was running
into some difficulties with pickle. Upon some experimentation with
pdb, I found that pickle.load() doesn't load *all* of the data the
_first_ time it's called.
For
On Wed, 2009-10-28 at 15:32 +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
def index(request):
unmaintanable_html =
html
head
titleIndex/title
/head
body
h1Embedded HTML is a PITA/h1
pbut some like pains.../p
/body
/html
return HttpResponse(unmaintanable_html)
And if
On Wed, 2009-10-28 at 16:38 +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
return HttpResponse(unmaintanable_html % data)
That's fine for single variables, but if I need to output a table of
unknown rows? I assume that return means the end of the script.
Therefore I should shove the whole table into a
On Wed, 2009-10-28 at 07:15 -0700, banu wrote:
Thanks for the reply Jon
Basically I need to move into a folder and then need to execute some
shell commands(make etc.) in that folder. I just gave 'ls' for the
sake of an example. The real problem I am facing is, how to stay in
the folder
On Thu, 2009-10-29 at 17:27 -0500, Robert Kern wrote:
I consider import * the first error to be fixed, so it doesn't
bother me much. :-)
But does pyflakes at least *warn* about the use of import * (I've
never used it so just asking)?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thu, 2009-10-29 at 20:27 -0700, Adam N wrote:
[...]
On December 5, DARPA will raise 10 red weather balloons somewhere in
the US. The first person to get the location of all 10 balloons and
submit them will be given $40k.
Hasn't the U.S. had enough weather balloon-related publicity stunts?
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 21:32 +1300, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
Modules will sometimes find
themselves on the path in Windows, so the fact that Windows performs
a
library search on the path is quite significant.
Why is it only Windows is prone to this problem?
I think as someone pointed
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 10:08 +1100, Ben Finney wrote:
The ‘datetime’ module focusses on individual date+time values (and the
periods between them, with the ‘timedelta’ type).
For querying the properties of the calendar, use the ‘calendar’
module.
Yes, it would be nice if the ‘time’,
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 20:34 +1100, Ben Finney wrote:
Fixing ‘time’, ‘datetime’, and ‘calendar’ was the reason for Python 3?
No, it wasn't.
Or perhaps you mean that any backward-incompatible change was a reason
to have Python 3? Even more firmly no. The extent of changes was
severely limited
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 03:07 -0700, knipknap wrote:
Hi,
Running ./configure in the 2.6.4 sources produces the following error:
config.status: error: cannot find input file: Makefile.pre.in
Indeed, such a file is not contained anywhere in the Pakage.
Which sources are you referring to?
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 23:58 +1300, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
I just checked my Debian installation:
l...@theon:~ find /lib /usr/lib -name \*.so -a -not -name lib\*
-print | wc -l
2950
l...@theon:~ find /lib /usr/lib -name \*.so -print | wc -l
4708
So 63% of the
On Sat, 2009-10-31 at 16:27 +, kj wrote:
2) this has been fixed in Py3
In my post I illustrated that the failure occurs both with Python
2.6 *and* Python 3.0. Did you have a particular version of Python
3 in mind?
I was not able to reproduce with my python3:
$ head ham/*.py
On Mon, 2010-03-01 at 10:48 +0100, Bart Smeets wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to write a script which detects when a new removable drive
is connected to the computer. On #python I was advised to use the
dbus-bindings. However the documentation on this is limited. Does
anyone know of an example
1 - 100 of 216 matches
Mail list logo