Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-21 Thread Chris Barker
Andrew Straw wrote: > Here's one that seems like > it might work, but I haven't tried it yet: > http://software.jessies.org/terminator Now if only there was a decent terminal emulator for Windows that didn't use cygwin... -Chris -- Christopher Barker, Ph.D. Oceanographer Emergency Respons

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Andrew Straw
Robert Kern wrote: > On Windows, you may be out of luck. I don't know of any > fully-Unicode-capable terminal. The lack of a decent console application is one of the most problematic issues I face whenever attempting to do serious programming in Windows. I wish I knew of a better terminal program

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Mark Janikas
: Discussion of Numerical Python Subject: Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters Mark Janikas wrote: > Thanks Robert but alas, I get. > >>>> import sys >>>> sys.stdout.encoding > 'cp437' >>>> print u'\u03a7\u00b2'.encode(sys.stdout.e

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Stefan van der Walt
On Tue, Feb 20, 2007 at 05:29:25PM -0800, Mark Janikas wrote: > Oh. I am using CygWin, and the website I just went to: > > http://www.cygwin.com/faq/faq_3.html > > > stated that: " The short answer is that Cygwin is not Unicode-aware" > > Not sure if this is going to apply to python in general

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Robert Kern
Mark Janikas wrote: > Thanks Robert but alas, I get. > import sys sys.stdout.encoding > 'cp437' print u'\u03a7\u00b2'.encode(sys.stdout.encoding) > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "", line 1, in ? > File "C:\Python24\lib\encodings\cp437.py", line 18, in encode

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Mark Janikas
inal Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark Janikas Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2007 5:16 PM To: Discussion of Numerical Python Subject: Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters Thanks Robert but alas, I get. >>> import sys >>> sys.stdout.e

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Mark Janikas
s Thanks again, MJ -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Robert Kern Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2007 4:20 PM To: Discussion of Numerical Python Subject: Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters Mark Janikas wrote: > Hello all, > >

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Mark Janikas
Thanks for all the info. That website with all the codes is great. MJ -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Zachary Pincus Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2007 4:18 PM To: Discussion of Numerical Python Subject: Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Robert Kern
Mark Janikas wrote: > Hello all, > > I was wondering how I could print the chi-squared symbol in python. I > have been looking at the Unicode docs, but I figured I would ask for > assistance here while I delve into it. Thanks for any help in advance. Print it where? To the terminal (which one?)

Re: [Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Zachary Pincus
I have found that the python 'unicode name' escape sequence, combined with the canonical list of unicode names ( http://unicode.org/Public/ UNIDATA/NamesList.txt ), is a good way of getting the symbols you want and still keeping the python code legible. From the above list, we see that the s

[Numpy-discussion] Greek Letters

2007-02-20 Thread Mark Janikas
Hello all, I was wondering how I could print the chi-squared symbol in python. I have been looking at the Unicode docs, but I figured I would ask for assistance here while I delve into it. Thanks for any help in advance. Mark Janikas Product Engineer ESRI, Geoprocessing 380 New York St