On Apr 8, 2022, 6:49 AM -0500, Greg Ewing , wrote:
> On 8/04/22 12:13 pm, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
> > And
> > for lurkers and subscribers here to enable email notifications for
> > categories of interest over there.
>
> Is it possible to participate in a Discourse discussion entirely
> by email,
On Apr 21, 2021, 5:29 PM -0500, Paul Bryan , wrote:
> As demonstrated, protocols don't get us there because duck typing isn't a
> matter of having an object exhibit all of the attributes of a duck, but
> rather some subset of attributes to be used by the consumer. I want this duck
> to quack;
Python-dev is for development *of* Python, not *in* Python! You want
python-list instead.
Also, make sure you include some full example code where the error occurs
and what exactly is failing. Right now, it's hard for me to tell what
exactly is going on...
On Mon, Sep 17, 2018, 8:21 PM Avery
Thought: what if there's a label on the bug tracker meaning roughly "we're
probably not going to fix this anytime soon, but we won't mind someone
stepping up"?
On Thu, Sep 6, 2018, 10:04 AM Guido van Rossum wrote:
> FWIW I'm with Antoine here -- XML is still important and I'd like us to go
>
I think you generally want to sent this to the list administrators
directly, but FWIW this has happened to me before. If it doesn't come up
again, you can probably ignore it.
On Mon, Aug 20, 2018, 1:43 AM Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
wrote:
> just notifying that 199.103.2.101
> was trying to remove
On July 6, 2018 5:04:05 PM Antoine Pitrou wrote:
(or contact the PEP's authors
privately).
Hoenstly, this feels like a recipe for a disaster...
As for the other kinds of threads, as much as I dislike PEP 572, they
are useless now.
Regards
Antoine.
On Fri, 6 Jul 2018 23:50:46 +0200
Type hints like in PEP 484 work on all Python 3 versions, and something
similar to your proposal is already supported on Python 2 [1].
[1]: https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/latest/python2.html
On July 4, 2018 11:08:27 PM Shawn Chen wrote:
Hello,
Here, I am proposing a change on python type
AFAIK there's no setting like this available, and I've done this many times
on other repos with no trouble. Maybe it could be a GitHub bug?
On May 28, 2018 4:59:03 AM Victor Stinner wrote:
Hi,
Since one or two weeks, I noticed that it's difficult to merge pull
requests
https://refi64.com/uprocd/
On May 11, 2018 9:39:28 AM Chris Barker - NOAA Federal via Python-Dev
wrote:
Inspired by chg:
Could one make a little startup utility that, when invoked the first
time, starts up a raw python interpreter, keeps it running somewhere,
and
On May 7, 2018 9:15:32 PM Steve Dower wrote:
“the data shows that a focused change to address file system inefficiencies
has the potential to broadly and transparently deliver benefit to users
without affecting existing code or workflows.”
This is consistent with a
10 years feels like a simultaneously long and arbitrary limit. IMO a policy
of "try to avoid major language features for a while" would work better.
On Mon, May 7, 2018 at 2:11 PM Craig Rodrigues
wrote:
>
>
> On Sun, May 6, 2018 at 7:35 PM Nick Coghlan
On May 3, 2018 11:56:24 AM MRAB wrote:
On 2018-05-03 13:24, Steve Holden wrote:
On Thu, May 3, 2018 at 12:12 AM, Ivan Pozdeev via Python-Dev
> wrote:
On 03.05.2018 1:01, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
On
I'm hardly an expert, but AFAIK CPython's start-up issues are more due to a
mix of architectural issues and the fact that it's hard to optimize imports
while maintaining backwards compatibility with Python's dynamism.
--
Ryan (ライアン)
Yoko Shimomura, ryo (supercell/EGOIST), Hiroyuki Sawano >>
On April 27, 2018 12:16:09 AM Mike Miller wrote:
Sorry all, wasn't specific enough.
By "modern" I mean the last decade perhaps. New languages that have had a
chance to look at the older generations and choose their best ideas, while
leaving behind the rest.
On April 25, 2018 11:05:04 PM Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info> wrote:
On Wed, Apr 25, 2018 at 09:36:31PM -0500, Ryan Gonzalez wrote:
I have to say I'm not overly thrilled with PEP 572...it's almost odd,
because if you asked me back when I first joined this list when I was 13, I
wo
I have to say I'm not overly thrilled with PEP 572...it's almost odd,
because if you asked me back when I first joined this list when I was 13, I
would've no doubt said *YES*. But, since then, I've gone across many
projects and languages, and fundamentally *I have never felt hurt by the
Do you have ca-certificates installed?
On April 7, 2018 5:33:35 PM Skip Montanaro wrote:
It's been a long while since I rebuilt Python from the Git source. I
tried for the first time the other day. Everything passed except
test_poplib and test_asyncio. The former
Question: why is this using GitLab while CPython itself is using GitHub +
Travis?
On December 10, 2017 6:13:53 PM CST, Barry Warsaw wrote:
>As part of our work on importlib_resources, and with some fantastic
>help from Abhilash Raj, we now have a mostly official Python
Doesn't Git make this rather easy, though?
e.g. you can find all deleted files with:
git log --diff-filter=D --summary
and find a specific file with (showing glob patterns):
git log --all --full-history -- **/thefile.*
and then show it:
git show --
or restore it:
git checkout ^ --
This list is for development of Python itself, not development with
Python. You want python-list:
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
That being said: use the latest version (3.6 as of right now).
On Thu, Nov 2, 2017 at 12:52 PM, Bob Woolsey wrote:
>
>
>
FWIW this will also make cross-compiling a lot easier, since you can't
accidentally overwrite the cross-compiled pgen as easily.
On Thu, May 4, 2017 at 12:13 PM, Victor Stinner
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> tl;dr Are you ok to backport my change replacing "make touch" with
> "make
On Mar 31, 2017 10:48 AM, "Victor Stinner" wrote:
Hi,
The CPython repository was converted from Mercurial to Git. Before
with Mercurial, we used extensively merges. For example, a bug was
fixed in branche 3.5, merged into 3.6 and then merged into master.
With the
So, I had opened up a PR (#563) to add README.rst to the distutils readme
list. Turns out, I didn't read the devguide correctly, and there needed to
be an open issue first. Oops.
Then I found bpo-11913 (https://bugs.python.org/issue11913), which said:
This would be easy to fix, but as it would
exec -a would seem to end up setting argv[0] on the CPython interpreter
itself, which I don't think is the desired effect...
--
Ryan (ライアン)
Yoko Shimomura > ryo (supercell/EGOIST) > Hiroyuki Sawano >> everyone else
http://refi64.com
On Mar 18, 2017 10:11 AM, "Freddy Rietdijk"
Ok, in advance, my apologies for probably sending this to the wrong mailing
list...
Anyway, the most holy page in the entire Python website, containing all
sorts of deadly and wicked items, seems to have gathered a couple pounds of
dust:
https://www.python.org/doc/humor/
And by "pounds of
E.g.:
import typing
print(typing.Pattern, typing.Match) # Works.
from typing import *
print(Pattern, Match) # NameError: name 'Pattern' is not defined
A quick look shows that typing.py doesn't have Pattern and Match in
__all__. Was this intentional, or just an oversight?
--
Ryan
[ERROR]:
On Wed, Oct 12, 2016 at 7:05 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> I work with a full-stack web development bootcamp. Most of the course
> focuses on *JavaScript (Node.js, React, jQuery, etc),*
Poor students... ;)
> but there's a
> one-week period in which each student gets to pick
:D
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On Sep 7, 2016 1:20 PM, "Guido van Rossum" wrote:
> I'm accepting PEP 526 provisionally.
>
> I am personally confident that this PEP is
Wonder if it's ever segfaulted...
...hey, I just figured out why we got Python 3! ;)
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On Sep 7, 2016 2:02 PM, "Antoine Pitrou" wrote:
>
Wrong mailing list. This is for the discussion of development *of* Python,
not *in* Python. You probably want:
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Regardless, this page should answer your questions:
https://packaging.python.org/distributing/
On Tue, Sep 6, 2016 at 11:31 AM,
Maybe the PEP should just say it's for "annotating variables", and it would
mention "primarily for the purpose of types"?
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On Sep 5, 2016 10:27 AM, "Mark Shannon"
On Sep 2, 2016 8:51 AM, "Mark Shannon" wrote:
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> I think we should reject, or at least postpone PEP 526.
>
> PEP 526 represents a major change to the language, however there are, I
believe, a number of technical flaws with the PEP.
>
> It is probable that with
On Jun 8, 2016 4:04 PM, "Neil Schemenauer" wrote:
>
> [I've posted something about this on python-ideas but since I now
> have some basic working code, I think it is more than an idea.]
>
> I think the uptake of Python 3 is starting to accelerate. That's
> good. However, there
On May 27, 2016 3:04 PM, "Victor Stinner" wrote:
>
> Le vendredi 27 mai 2016, M.-A. Lemburg a écrit :
>>
>> The curent patch is 1.2MB for SHA-3 - that's pretty heavy for just
>>
>> a few hash functions, which aren't in any wide spread use yet and
>>
Wouldn't downloading the Microsoft C++ Runtime 2015 also work? Many recent
computers already have it pre-installed.
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On May 25, 2016 2:31 PM, "Chris Barker"
Well, the stack trace was pointing to the line that called Tesseract, so I
figured that was the problem.
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On May 5, 2016 11:24 AM, "MRAB"
On Thu, May 5, 2016 at 3:24 AM, Deepak Srivastava
wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> I am new to python and very much excited to learn this technology.
>
> I have done setup of python 3.5.1 with PyCharm community edition on
> windows 7(64bit service pack 1).
>
> I am trying to
Well, I put this in Google Translate...and got this:
The disk clatters
the Spontie giggles
~
hopefully
alliance insures ...
Not sure if this a useless post or Translate just being weird. Leaning
towards the latter...
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
Oh wow, has a year passed already? I don't have access to an Android device
suitable for development, and Cyd seems to have disappeared, which is why
the issue ended up abandoned. I'd be happy to try to help with the new
effort if possible!
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200
t;victor.stin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Le mercredi 13 avril 2016, Ryan Gonzalez <rym...@gmail.com> a écrit :
>
>> What is the value of HAS_ARG going to be now?
>>
>
> I asked Demur to keep HAS_ARG(). Not really for backward compatibility,
> but for the dis module: to kee
What is the value of HAS_ARG going to be now?
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On Apr 13, 2016 11:26 AM, "Victor Stinner" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> In the middle of recent
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
On Apr 6, 2016 12:28 PM, "Brett Cannon" wrote:
>
> WIth Ethan volunteering to do the work to help make a path protocol a
thing -- and I'm willing
Well, based on recent feedback, you should wait for Phyton 80, which will
also make your bean plants start growing hair.
(Side note: This is seriously weird. :O )
--
Ryan
[ERROR]: Your autotools build scripts are 200 lines longer than your
program. Something’s wrong.
http://kirbyfan64.github.io/
Python's exception handling system is currently badly brokeTypeError:
unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'NoneType' and 'NoneType'n. Therefore,
with the recent news of the joyous release of Python 8 (
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2016-March/143603.html), I
have decided to propose a
win16 doesn't seem to have important stuff:
https://github.com/python/cpython/search?utf8=✓="win16;
On January 28, 2016 8:57:20 AM CST, Larry Hastings wrote:
>
>
>Check out and cd into Python trunk.
>
>% grep -Ri win16 * | wc
> 10 66 625
>
>% grep -Ri nextstep
On January 25, 2016 9:59:36 PM CST, Chris Angelico wrote:
>On Tue, Jan 26, 2016 at 2:32 PM, INADA Naoki
>wrote:
>>
>> I know.
>> But people compares language speed by simple microbench like
>fibbonacci.
>> They doesn't use listcomp or libraries to
On January 25, 2016 9:32:07 PM CST, INADA Naoki wrote:
>On Tue, Jan 26, 2016 at 12:02 PM, Andrew Barnert
>wrote:
>
>> On Jan 25, 2016, at 18:21, INADA Naoki
>wrote:
>> >
>> > I'm very interested in it.
>> >
>> > Ruby 2.2 and
Is it possible to contribute to this, even if you're not part of the core dev
team?
On January 10, 2016 11:43:48 AM CST, Brett Cannon wrote:
>For those of you who have not heard, I made the decision a little over
>a
>week ago to move Python's development from our home-grown
On December 16, 2015 8:12:47 AM CST, Serhiy Storchaka
wrote:
>I'm bringing this up again, since the results of the previous poll did
>not give an unambiguous result. Related links: [1], [2], [3], [4].
>
>Let me remind you that we are talking about adding the following
On December 3, 2015 10:09:56 AM CST, Ryan Gonzalez <rym...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>On December 3, 2015 8:26:23 AM CST, Laura Creighton <l...@openend.se>
>wrote:
>>In a message of Thu, 03 Dec 2015 13:37:17 +, Paul Moore writes:
>>>On 3 December 2015 at
On December 3, 2015 8:26:23 AM CST, Laura Creighton wrote:
>In a message of Thu, 03 Dec 2015 13:37:17 +, Paul Moore writes:
>>On 3 December 2015 at 12:51, Laura Creighton wrote:
>>> Intentional or Oversight?
>>
>>Hard to find :-)
>>
Did you get the x86-64 version or x86? If you had gotten the former, it would
lead to that error.
On December 1, 2015 8:30:25 AM CST, Alexei Belenki via Python-Dev
wrote:
>Installed python 3.5 (from https://www.python.org/downloads/) on
>Windows XPsp3/32
>On starting
Well, not quite the same thing, but
https://github.com/kirbyfan64/pfbuild/blob/master/pfbuild embeds the compressed
version of 16k LOC. Would it be affected negatively in any way be this?
Since all the data is on one line, I'd think the old (current) parser would end
up reading in the whole
On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 5:02 PM, Michiel Overtoom wrote:
>
> > On 06 Nov 2015, at 18:08, Mark Roseman wrote:
> >
> > (There’s also currently a post on Hacker News about this).
>
> You have a link for that HN item? I've looked at the first five pages but
>
On Sun, Nov 1, 2015 at 4:42 PM, Benjamin Peterson
wrote:
> Happy November, everyone. It’s nearly time for the next semi-annual
> instalment of the 2.7 series. I’m planning to release a 2.7.11 release
> candidate on November 21st and 2.7.11 final on December 5.
>
> More than
Why not just check the path of the imported modules and compare it with the
Python library directory?
On October 29, 2015 3:26:08 PM CDT, Mark Roseman wrote:
>Laura, I think what you want should actually be more-or-less doable in
>IDLE.
>
>The main routine that starts IDLE
Well, tell your friend that that means middle and high schoolers must think
alike! :D
On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 4:18 PM, Laura Creighton <l...@openend.se> wrote:
> In a message of Thu, 29 Oct 2015 15:50:30 -0500, Ryan Gonzalez writes:
> >Why not just check the path of the i
t; On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 1:50 PM, Ryan Gonzalez <rym...@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>> > Why not just check the path of the imported modules and compare it
>with the
>> > Python library directory?
>>
>> It works, but it requires that everyone who could run int
Ah, I missed that part. Sorry! :/
On October 22, 2015 7:27:41 AM CDT, "Eric V. Smith" <e...@trueblade.com> wrote:
>On 10/22/2015 7:32 AM, Eric V. Smith wrote:
>> On 10/21/2015 10:57 PM, Ryan Gonzalez wrote:
>>> It mentions fr'...' as a formatted raw string but
On October 22, 2015 11:10:48 AM CDT, "Sven R. Kunze" wrote:
>On 22.10.2015 13:32, Eric V. Smith wrote:
>> ['B', 'BF', 'BFR', 'BFr', 'BR', 'BRF', 'BRf', 'Bf', 'BfR', 'Bfr',
>'Br',
>> 'BrF', 'Brf', 'F', 'FB', 'FBR', 'FBr', 'FR', 'FRB', 'FRb', 'Fb',
>'FbR',
>> 'Fbr', 'Fr', 'FrB',
But it'd be weird now if fR worked but fbR didn't.
On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 12:02 PM, Sven R. Kunze <srku...@mail.de> wrote:
> On 22.10.2015 18:17, Ryan Gonzalez wrote:
>
>>
>>> anything about it. 'FbR', really?
>>>>
>>> Why not disallowing them?
It mentions fr'...' as a formatted raw string but doesn't say anything about
rf'...'. Right now, in implementing PEP 498 support in Howl
(https://github.com/howl-editor/howl/pull/118 and
PSF. Nothing personal, of course...
On October 5, 2015 3:01:11 PM CDT, Guido van Rossum <gu...@python.org> wrote:
>"They"?
>
>On Mon, Oct 5, 2015 at 12:57 PM, Ryan Gonzalez <rym...@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
>> There is one reason I would be really fr
There is one reason I would be really freaking mad if they deprecated other
uses of annotations:
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/plac
On October 5, 2015 1:55:37 PM CDT, Steve Wedig wrote:
>Congratulations on the release of 3.5 and Pep 484. I've used Python
>professionally
t in python-ideas of course).
>
>I'm sorry you don't feel more included, but I really don't like the
>idea of
>"us vs. them" in this list. We're all working together to make Python
>the
>best language it can be.
>
>--Guido
>
>On Mon, Oct 5, 2015 at 1:18 PM, R
*cough* Google *cough*
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5911774/git-gui-like-hg-workbench-in-ms-windows
SourceTree looks quite similar.
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 2:07 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 9/17/2015 3:17 AM, André Freitas wrote:
>
>> Regarding Git tools for Windows,
On September 12, 2015 6:14:58 PM CDT, Tim Delaney
wrote:
>On 13 September 2015 at 04:42, Oleg Broytman wrote:
>
>>There are too many things that I personally can do with git but
>can't
>> do with hg. Because of that I switched all my
On September 5, 2015 12:27:26 PM CDT, David Mertz wrote:
>I have to apologize profusely here. Just after I offered to do this
>(and
>work even said it was OK in principle to do it on work time), my work
>load
>went through the roof. And now it's really already later than most
*before anyone else says it*
This list is for development *of* Python, not *in* Python. If you need help
with things like this, I'd advise you to use the python-list
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list mailing list or Stack
Overflow http://stackoverflow.com/.
On Thu, Aug 27,
I am tempted to reply with a slightly sarcastic message involving a cookie...
On July 17, 2015 6:40:21 PM CDT, Antoine Pitrou solip...@pitrou.net wrote:
Frankly, this kind of inept discussion, where a bunch of folks get hung
up about an extremely minor design decision (who cares whether assret
I have encountered this weird issue on Chrome for Android where scrolling up
just a little causes the page to dart to the top. I was going to report it in
the bug tracker, but I didn't see a label for the web site itself.
Worst part is, this is stopping me from reading the humor page!
--
Sent
like an interesting case to keep
in mind while evolving viewport resize behaviors.
On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 2:24 PM, Glenn Linderman v+pyt...@g.nevcal.com
wrote:
On 7/16/2015 12:11 PM, Ryan Gonzalez wrote:
I have encountered this weird issue on Chrome for Android where scrolling
up just
I did that once; it wasn't worth it. It was no smaller than what
PyInstaller would output and required manually adding in the required
modules that weren't in the stdlib, along with any extra DLLs (e.g. the Qt
DLLs).
On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 4:45 PM, Paul Moore p.f.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On 29
py2exe tends to invoke DLL hell if you have various versions of VS or Office or
both installed. Because Windows.
On May 28, 2015 11:23:57 AM CDT, Chris Barker chris.bar...@noaa.gov wrote:
I'm confused:
Doesn't py2exe (optionally) create a single file executable?
And py2app on the Mac creates
I agree that size is an issue, but is it really that bad? Just compare it to
the recent web surge where everyone is writing desktop apps in HTML5+CSS+JS
and bundling a huge WebKit engine in their apps binary.
Python on Windows is seriously in a bad state. IMO, what needs to be
prioritized is
YESSS!!!
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 8:09 PM, Larry Hastings la...@hastings.org wrote:
On 05/28/2015 05:58 PM, Victor Stinner wrote:
Why not continue to enhance Python 3 instead of wasting our time with
Python 2? We have limited resources in term of developers to maintain
Python.
Uh, guys,
Try building the module with -m32. The error message basically means:
../libpython35.a is 32-bit, but what you're building is 64-bit. Gotta love ld!
On May 25, 2015 3:06:01 PM CDT, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
As the subject says, I've been unable to build the regex module against
http://stackoverflow.com/a/29880095/2097780
My favorite thing about Python is that it's so easy to be evil. ;)
On Fri, May 1, 2015 at 2:30 PM, Christophe Bal projet...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello.
In this post
Then blow it up like Duck Dynasty does.
On April 23, 2015 12:07:46 PM CDT, Antoine Pitrou solip...@pitrou.net wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2015 09:58:33 -0700
Guido van Rossum gu...@python.org wrote:
I think this is the nail in PEP 3152's coffin.
If you only put one nail, it might manage to get out.
Only if you want Java users burning all written copies of the PEP...
On Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 2:37 PM, Isaac Morland ijmor...@uwaterloo.ca
wrote:
On Mon, 20 Apr 2015, Paul Moore wrote:
On 20 April 2015 at 19:41, Barry Warsaw ba...@python.org wrote:
tldr; type hints in python source are
Although I like the concept of type annotations and the PEP, I have to
agree with this. If I saw these type annotations when learning Python (I'm
self-taught), there's a 99% chance I would've freaked.
It's the same issue as with teaching C++: it's wrong to say, Hey, I taught
you the basics, but
I think this was meant for python-list.
On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 10:13 AM, Alan Armour aarm...@cipmail.org wrote:
its french! lol
I just wanted to see if you could, as well as making python able to have
assembly written, you should totally use blender as your main IDE it would
DOES NOBODY HAVE AN ANSWER TO THIS???
I'm REALLY relying on someone who works on Python to answer this. PLEASE??
On Wed, Feb 25, 2015 at 12:17 PM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com wrote:
So...
There was a recent discussion here on porting Python to Android. Well, for
those of you who saw too
So...
There was a recent discussion here on porting Python to Android. Well, for
those of you who saw too many unread messages and marked the whole thread
as read like I usually do, I helped Cyd figure out some patches that make
it work. Cyd then opened Issue 23496
Ask on python-list https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list.
Also check out the FAQ https://docs.python.org/3/faq/index.html and the Help
page https://www.python.org/about/help/. Not sure what your problem is;
Python is EXTREMELY well documented.
On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 7:15 PM, GARRY
...the fakechroot in the environment throws the
error and setup.py fails.
I'll roll back that change...any idea where I could find info about the
original method?
On February 2, 2015 3:17:54 PM CST, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com
wrote:
In reality, things just got broken even more. I don't know
In reality, things just got broken even more. I don't know when that patch
was created, but it's now very out of date: importlib._bootstrap has no
load function. That's what the error you're getting is telling you. Since
it isn't getting to load anything, the issue seems solved. Not really.
the problem by using grep...were
you looking for places where strdup called locale?
On January 30, 2015 7:52:47 PM CST, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com
wrote:
Regardless, if you're looking to toy more with stuff like this, I'd
highly recommend dual-booting with Ubuntu, which is what I'm doing now
Regardless, if you're looking to toy more with stuff like this, I'd highly
recommend dual-booting with Ubuntu, which is what I'm doing now. (Now I
rarely ever boot into Windows!)
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 7:51 PM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com wrote:
Do you have just the SDK (which doesn't
still getting a segfault on the newly built binary.
Will post info this afternoon.
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 12:10 PM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com wrote:
No, it returns NULL if malloc gives it a raw pointer. It unconditionally
checks the length of the (possibly null) string argument first
)
[ 01-29 19:30:55.855 23373:23373 F/libc ]
Fatal signal 11 (SIGSEGV) at 0x (code=1), thread 23373 (python)
Less detail than strace but it seems to be that python is segfaulting
libc...
On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 11:23 AM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wed, Jan 28
to be that python is segfaulting
libc...
On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 11:23 AM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 10:43 AM, Guido van Rossum
gu...@python.org
wrote:
What I see in the strace:
... load libpython3.4m.so.1.0
... load libm
... open /dev
:
Unfortunately it is still reporting the same function :-/.
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 1:44 PM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes...
Can you check if it's crashing in a different function now?
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 1:39 PM, Cyd Haselton chasel...@gmail.com
wrote:
Yes I did. I did have
linked to).
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 12:00 PM, Cyd Haselton chasel...@gmail.com wrote:
I don't have gdb on device; does the following tell you where Python's
strdup is called?
_PyMem_RawStrdup
/bld/python/Python-3.4.2/Objects/obmalloc.c:323
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 11:52 AM, Ryan Gonzalez rym
);
if (copy == NULL)
return NULL;
memcpy(copy, str, size);
return copy;
}
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 11:56 AM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com wrote:
I seriously doubt the issue is in that file; _PyMem_RawStrdup crashes
when
calling strlen. It's that whatever is calling
it tomorrow (earliest) or Sunday (latest). In
the meantime I'll also check to see if there's anything that can a)
run in an Android terminal and b) can take a stack trace; it would be
far, far, far easier than either option above.
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 4:19 PM, Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com
On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 10:43 AM, Guido van Rossum gu...@python.org wrote:
What I see in the strace:
... load libpython3.4m.so.1.0
... load libm
... open /dev/__properties__ and do something to it (what?)
... get current time
... allocate memory
... getuid
... segfault
That's not a lot
Looking at pydoc.py, it looks like the Tk is purely optional...and isn't
called from the interpreter. (I'm not a core dev, though, so take that with
a grain of salt.) However, can't you just strip out the gui function and
the one place in the file where it's called?
Again, not a main Python
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 3:30 PM, Victor Stinner victor.stin...@gmail.com
wrote:
Hi,
I installed the SP1 for Visual Studio 2010, and it looks like that it
broke my Windows SDK 7.1 (setenv was missing, cl.exe was also
missing). I uninstalled the SDK 7.1, and then I saw that a patch is
If you expand the Details section, it says the version is 7.1.
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 3:58 PM, Victor Stinner victor.stin...@gmail.com
wrote:
2015-01-15 22:39 GMT+01:00 Ryan Gonzalez rym...@gmail.com:
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=8279
Microsoft Windows SDK
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