Kevin Christman (el 2008-02-15 a les 08:00:02 -0800) va dir::
> sorry about the mangled table and un-indented code. Here is the
> formatting preserved:
> http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dcmrvf8_31cfvc7vfs
>
> So I recognize that row.append() should be applied only *once*, and
> that my current
A Friday 15 February 2008, Kevin Christman escrigué:
> sorry about the mangled table and un-indented code. Here is the
> formatting preserved:
> http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dcmrvf8_31cfvc7vfs
>
> So I recognize that row.append() should be applied only *once*, and
> that my current code is
sorry about the mangled table and un-indented code. Here is the formatting
preserved: http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dcmrvf8_31cfvc7vfs
So I recognize that row.append() should be applied only *once*, and that my
current code is bad. However, my question then is *how* does one fill the
sub
Kevin Christman (el 2008-02-14 a les 23:16:27 -0800) va dir::
> I have a question regarding nested tables. The populating a nested
> table example in the PyTables UserManual (pp. 44-45) only deals with a
> nested table that is called once and really doesn't subdivide.
> However, what if my data s