On 6 July 2012 14:09, Richard Harley rich...@scholarpack.com wrote:
On Zope 2.10 is there a simple/universal way to only allow python scripts to
be called by DTML methods or other python scripts and not directly TTW?
You can check that the script is not the published object with:
if
That works great, thanks. So there is no way to do this across, say, a
folder with hundreds of scripts in without duplicating the code in each
individually?
On 06/07/12 13:30, Laurence Rowe wrote:
On 6 July 2012 14:09, Richard Harleyrich...@scholarpack.com wrote:
On Zope 2.10 is there a
On 6 July 2012 16:36, Richard Harley rich...@scholarpack.com wrote:
That works great, thanks. So there is no way to do this across, say, a
folder with hundreds of scripts in without duplicating the code in each
individually?
For one Plone hotfix we took the approach of blacklisting certain
)
Jonathan
- Original Message -
From:
Muk Yan
To:
Jonathan
Cc:
zope@zope.org
Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2006 4:40
PM
Subject: Re: [Zope] Python Scripts and
HTML Forms
Hey All,Sorry about that, what I meant is that I get a
KeyError. It says that the first_name
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 17 Aug 2006, at 14:57, Muk Yan wrote:
What my question is, is there anyway to directly access
first_name from the form in the python script without having to
have to call the dtml-call REQUEST.SESSION.set('firstName',
first_name) and then
On Thursday 17 August 2006 1:57 pm, Muk Yan wrote:
Name:input type=text name:first_name
Make that:
input type=text name=first_name
DTML Method, process_this_form:
dtml-call REQUEST.SESSION.set ('firstName', first_name)
dtml-call this_is_a_python_script()
and in the Python Script,
On Thursday 17 August 2006 2:02 pm, Jens Vagelpohl wrote:
request.get(MY_VARIABLE) ???
The one major problem with that is that it ties you to getting information
from the request. Better to write a script with explicit parameters and
call it with those parameters. Then, you can pull values
Form variables are stored in REQUEST. In a python
script you gain access to REQUEST by:
REQUEST= container.REQUEST
you can then access the form variables
by:
fname = REQUEST['first_name']
you can check for the presence of a form variable
by
if
REQUEST.has_key('first_name'):
or
if
Hey Jonathan, All,
Thanks I tried your solution, but it doesn't seem to work. Can anybody
shed some more light on this situation, since what Jonathan provides is
exactly what I want to do, but it's not working.
Am I forgetting to put parameteres or some other newbie mistake like that?
Thanks in
2006 4:20
PM
Subject: Re: [Zope] Python Scripts and
HTML Forms
Hey Jonathan, All,Thanks I tried your solution, but it
doesn't seem to work. Can anybody shed some more light on this
situation, since what Jonathan provides is exactly what I want to do, but it's
not working.Am I forgett
PM
Subject: Re: [Zope] Python Scripts and
HTML Forms
Hey Jonathan, All,Thanks I tried your solution, but it
doesn't seem to work. Can anybody shed some more light on this
situation, since what Jonathan provides is exactly what I want to do, but it's
not working.Am I forgetting to put
rresponding form field (an entry is made in REQUEST only when
data is entered in the form field)
Jonathan
- Original Message -
From:
Muk Yan
To: Jonathan
Cc: zope@zope.org
Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2006 4:40
PM
Subject: Re: [Zope] Python Scripts and
HTML Forms
At Thursday 17/8/2006 17:40, Muk Yan wrote:
Sorry about that, what I meant is that I get a KeyError. It says
that the first_name in REQUEST['first_name'] is not found, when I
try to set the variable in line in the script where fname =
REQUEST['first_name'].
Read the previous responses, you
Dennis Allison wrote at 2005-6-16 09:06 -0700:
We have been seeing a number of instances where python scripts fail due to
an apparent syntax error but the syntax is correct and simply storing
the method restores it to functionality. Anyone else seeing this?
I saw this today.
I expect DOS
We have been seeing a number of instances where python scripts fail
due to an apparent syntax error but the syntax is correct and simply
storing the method restores it to functionality. Anyone else seeing
this?
How do you mean fail?
Often times, if you have an error, save, test, and then
Yeah, I do see that every once in a while. I have a very simple
script, that looks perfect, but will always return syntax error. I
copied the text, pasted into a text editor and checked all the indents
and tabs, then recreated the script. Problem went away.
What was interesting is that I didnt
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| Centre for Computing Services|
| Imperial College |
+--+
-Original Message-
From: Mayers, Philip J
Sent: 09 January 2001 10:01
To: 'Bill Anderson'
Subject: RE: [Zope] Python Scripts in 2.2.x
No, I'm afraid not:
Traceback
I'm running PythonScripts with 2.2.4 and, with one exception, they seem to
be working just fine. The exception is that DTML namespace binding does not
work under 2.2. You can, however, pass the namespace explicitly to get the
same effect. Here is what you need to do to get it working. Note
Michel Pelletier wrote:
See, people used to post helpful little things like this in DTML. What a
nightmare. Python Scripts rock! We're gonna be seein' alot more of them
fly by on the list once people get over the initial shock that they can do
90% of what they've been doing in Python.
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