Hi All,
Pydev and Pydev Extensions 1.2.6 have been released
Details on Pydev Extensions: http://www.fabioz.com/pydev
Details on Pydev: http://pydev.sf.net
Details on its development: http://pydev.blogspot.com
Release Highlights in Pydev Extensions:
Don't forget to book your hotel room for PyCon 2007!
The special PyCon room rates at the Dallas/Addison Marriott Quorum are
US$79/night for 1-2 people, and US$89/night for 3-4 people; there's an
additional hotel tax of 13% on top of this rate. This rate is only
available until February 1st.
To
On Jan 24, 2:24 am, auditory [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am a newbie here
I am trying to read space separated floating point data from file
I read about csv module by searching this group,
but I couldn't read space separated values with csv.
(which may be matter of course..)
I also read
Yep, that was it. Thanks Gary :-)
Sean
On Jan 23, 2007, at 5:05 PM, Gary Herron wrote:
Sean Schertell wrote:
person.name = 'Joe'
person.age = 20
person.sex = 'm'
info_I_need = name
print person.info_I_need
# How can I make it print 'Joe' ?
Sean
DataFly.Net
George Sakkis ? ?:
On Jan 24, 2:24 am, auditory [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am a newbie here
I am trying to read space separated floating point data from file
I read about csv module by searching this group,
but I couldn't read space separated values with csv.
(which may be matter of
I successfully built and installed Python 2.2.3 in cygwin. But there is
something wrong in the sys.path. I use following statments for a test.
import sys
print sys.path
['', 'C/lib/python2.2/', 'C/lib/python2.2/plat-cygwin', 'C/lib/python2.2/lib-tk'
, '\\Python24/lib/python2.2/lib-dynload']
Travis E. Oliphant ? ?:
auditory wrote:
I am a newbie here
I am trying to read space separated floating point data from file
I read about csv module by searching this group,
but I couldn't read space separated values with csv.
(which may be matter of course..)
I also read about
I successfully built and installed Python 2.2.3 in cygwin. But there is
something wrong in the sys.path. I use following statments for a test.
import sys
print sys.path
['', 'C/lib/python2.2/', 'C/lib/python2.2/plat-cygwin', 'C/lib/python2.2/lib-tk'
, '\\Python24/lib/python2.2/lib-dynload']
use pexpect to set the prompt after the login.
class Login(General):
Class spawning an ssh expect instance
def __init__(self, user, host, pwd, cfg_name=None, log=None):
if cfg_name:
self.testcell = test_config(cfg_name)
The information about this module:
http://www.xhaus.com/alan/python/timeout.html
I can't access the download url due to the severe network issue these
days, and I need to use this module for work.
Could anyone do me a favor to send a copy? the download url :
Hi thre,
On Jan 24, 5:24 am, Achim Domma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I want to use Python to script some formulas in my application.
Depending on what you're trying to do, you might possibly find it
useful to lake a look at the approach used by PyGINAC, which is a
symbolic algebra system (in C++)
Hi,
I known this can be impossible but what about an HTML GUI ?
Daniel Jonsson wrote:
So, I've reached the point where my building pipeline tools actually
needs to be used by other people in my company. By this reason I
actually need to think about the usability, and I've come to the
A: Because you need three modules to parse, edit and reassemble query
string. urlparse, cgi and urllib
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 24/01/07, py [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would love for anybody to comment on this code with regard to
redundancy/efficiency/wordiness or whatever else.
for instance, do i understand correctly that i cant have a try: else: without
an intervening except:?
-dave
Hello
I am using python, pyGTK and GTK+ on HPUX (unix)
In this context, the pygtk documentation about gobject.spawn_async says
: ... you must use a GChildWatch source to be notified about the death
of the child process ...
Does someone know where to find details about GChildWatch ? I didn't
Hi All,
Pydev and Pydev Extensions 1.2.6 have been released
Details on Pydev Extensions: http://www.fabioz.com/pydev
Details on Pydev: http://pydev.sf.net
Details on its development: http://pydev.blogspot.com
Release Highlights in Pydev Extensions:
imageguy wrote:
I was looking for ( and still am searching for) similiar functionality.
Specifically I would like to be able to capture a small area of the
screen (a number or a code) and convert this to text that can be used
in my application.
There is a windows executable version of gnu
Chris Mellon wrote:
On 1/23/07, Boris Borcic [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...A simple -
with Tkinter or otherwise - way to wrap access to the MS Windows UI text
rendering engine, as a function that would return a picture of rendered
text,
given a string, a font, a size and colors ?
...
But you can do capsulation to them.
On 1月24日, 午後7:50, techtonik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A: Because you need three modules to parse, edit and reassemble query
string. urlparse, cgi and urllib
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Robert,
Thanks, I passed the contents of this thread along to distutils-sig.
Hopefully the list moderator is awake, as I'm not subscribed there... ;-)
Skip
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 1/24/07, Tim Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 24/01/07, py [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would love for anybody to comment on this code with regard to
redundancy/efficiency/wordiness or whatever else.
for instance, do i understand correctly that i cant have a try: else:
without an
I finally found what I was searching for here:
http://www.thescripts.com/forum/thread25264.html
I wanted the reference to the current module and we can obtain it this way:
sys.modules[__name__]
so its property can be used.
Thanks,
Erick
--
I'm wondering what happens with the exception info during object cleanup
immediately after an exception is thrown. Consider this code:
PyObject *args = PyBuild_Value((O(O){}), name, parent);
if (!args)
return NULL;
PyObject *val = some_python_func(x, args, NULL);
Py_DECREF(args);
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise name must be a string
print Hello + name
Is the use of
Wang,
On Wed, Jan 24, 2007 at 04:14:48PM +0800, Wang Shuhao wrote:
I successfully built and installed Python 2.2.3 in cygwin.
[snip]
Obviously, 'C/lib/python2.2/' is a wrong path. In fact my python is
installed in /usr/local/lib/python2.2.3. The result of the issue is
that when you run a
Scott Ballard wrote:
Sorry for the lame question, I'm still trying to pick up Python and new to
the list here.
Welcome!
I'm assuming that I should use storbinary( command, file[, blocksize]) to
transfer the files. the documentation says command should be an appropriate
STOR command:
On Jan 24, 3:38 pm, abcd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise
On Jan 24, 12:09 am, Daniel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've downloaded both the wxPython and the PyQt4 package, and by the
first impression I must say that the PyQt4 system had a very
compelling presentation. From what I can understand from the feedback
I've gotten so far is that the wxPython is
abcd wrote:
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise name must be a string
print Hello
Laurent Rahuel wrote:
Hi,
I known this can be impossible but what about an HTML GUI ?
Daniel Jonsson wrote:
So, I've reached the point where my building pipeline tools actually
needs to be used by other people in my company. By this reason I
actually need to think about the usability,
abcd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise name must be a string
On Wednesday 24 January 2007 1:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello!
I must be doing something wrong here because I'm getting all these
missing .dll messages after installing PyQT. This is what I've done (no
step excluded):
1. Fresh installation of Python25
2. I run the
Wang Shuhao wrote:
I successfully built and installed Python 2.2.3 in cygwin. But there is
something wrong in the sys.path. I use following statments for a test.
import sys
print sys.path
['', 'C/lib/python2.2/', 'C/lib/python2.2/plat-cygwin',
'C/lib/python2.2/lib-tk'
,
Hello!
I must be doing something wrong here because I'm getting all these
missing .dll messages after installing PyQT. This is what I've done (no
step excluded):
1. Fresh installation of Python25
2. I run the PyQt-gpl-4.1.1-Py2.5-Qt4.2.2.exe file which should include
SIP
3. I run the
On 24/01/2007 1.45, Joshua J. Kugler wrote:
I've downloaded both the wxPython and the PyQt4 package, and by the
first impression I must say that the PyQt4 system had a very
compelling presentation. From what I can understand from the feedback
I've gotten so far is that the wxPython is a
On 24/01/2007 14.36, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I must be doing something wrong here because I'm getting all these
missing .dll messages after installing PyQT. This is what I've done (no
step excluded):
1. Fresh installation of Python25
2. I run the PyQt-gpl-4.1.1-Py2.5-Qt4.2.2.exe file
Hi,
googled for a Python library that support AFP but
found only a PERL module:
http://search.cpan.org/src/AUTRIJUS/Parse-AFP-0.24/
Maybe someone know of a similar library for Python ?
PS: in alternative if there are some interested people
we can implement it...
:-))
Thanks
The Python way is to validate by performing the operations you need to
perform and catching any exceptions that result. In the case of your
example, you seem to be saying that you'd rather raise your own
exception (which, by the way, should really be a subclass of Exception,
but we will
Carroll, Barry wrote:
Greetings:
Personally, I don't think top-posting is the most annoying newsgroup
habit. I think it's making a big fuss about minor inconveniences.
One of the nicest things about being human is the amazing flexibility of
our brains. For example, if a block of text
On 2007-01-24, abcd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise name
On Jan 24, 3:00 pm, Giovanni Bajo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thus, it is well possible to write internal GPL software, using the Qt Open
Source library, and to release/distribute/use it *ONLY* internally.
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLRequireSourcePostedPublic
Also, it
should be
Chris Mellon wrote:
Using either win32 or wxPython you will be able to produce bitmaps
directly, without needing to create a visible window.
Some quick dirty wxPython code
def getTextBitmap(text, font, fgcolor, bgcolor):
dc = wx.MemoryDC()
dc.SetFont(font)
width,
abcd a écrit :
In my code I am debating whether or not to validate the types of data
being passed to my functions. For example
def sayHello(self, name):
if not name:
rasie name can't be null
if not isinstance(name, str):
raise name must be a string
print
There is only python2.2.3 on my machine, and the location is
/usr/local/lib/python2.2 . I say the 'C/lib/python2.2/' is a wrong path is
because the leading C/lib is not point to the location of my python
installation. I'v found the solution anyway. The environment variable
PYTHONHOME controls
Joshua J. Kugler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Daniel wrote:
I've downloaded both the wxPython and the PyQt4 package, and by the
first impression I must say that the PyQt4 system had a very
compelling presentation. From what I can understand from the feedback
I've gotten so far is that the
Daniel Jonsson wrote:
So, I've reached the point where my building pipeline tools actually
needs to be used by other people in my company. By this reason I
actually need to think about the usability, and I've come to the
conclusion that I need a GUI. So, which of the two packages should I
Kevin Walzer wrote:
Tablelist: http://www.nemethi.de/
Tabelist for Tkinter (with Tile support):
http://tkinter.unpythonic.net/wiki/TableListTileWrapper
Additionally, here is a link to some screenshots for Tablelist:
http://www.nemethi.privat.t-online.de/tablelist/screenshots.html
--
John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The major complaint I have about Python is that the packages
which connect it to other software components all seem to have
serious problems. As long as you don't need to talk to anything
outside the Python world, you're fine. But once you do, things
Kevin Walzer wrote:
Kevin Walzer wrote:
Tablelist: http://www.nemethi.de/
Tabelist for Tkinter (with Tile support):
http://tkinter.unpythonic.net/wiki/TableListTileWrapper
Additionally, here is a link to some screenshots for Tablelist:
I'm having some trouble getting attachments right for all recipients,
and it seems like Apple's mail.app is the pickiest client at the moment.
It doesn't handle attachments that both Thunderbird and Outlook find
perfectly acceptable.
Since the code I'm using is currently ugly and embedded,
On 24/01/07, BJ Swope [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 1/24/07, Tim Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 24/01/07, py [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would love for anybody to comment on this code with regard to
redundancy/efficiency/wordiness or whatever else.
for instance, do i understand
abcd wrote:
The Python way is to validate by performing the operations you need to
perform and catching any exceptions that result. In the case of your
example, you seem to be saying that you'd rather raise your own
exception (which, by the way, should really be a subclass of Exception,
but
Wang,
Please keep your replies on-list.
On Wed, Jan 24, 2007 at 10:28:51PM +0800, Wang Shuhao wrote:
Why not use the Python that is part of the standard Cygwin
distribution?
Cause the Cygwin version python has the same problem, that why I try
to build python from source.
The above
Hello,
Images, video, mp3 music, the real news from around the world... it's all
inside waiting for you.
You can find almost anything you are looking for.
They offer some of the best premium newsgroup access anywhere.
One thing I love about them, they don't keep log files of the news I read or
On 1/24/07, Giovanni Bajo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 24/01/2007 1.45, Joshua J. Kugler wrote:
I've downloaded both the wxPython and the PyQt4 package, and by the
first impression I must say that the PyQt4 system had a very
compelling presentation. From what I can understand from the
hg wrote:
Kevin Walzer wrote:
Kevin Walzer wrote:
Tablelist: http://www.nemethi.de/
Tabelist for Tkinter (with Tile support):
http://tkinter.unpythonic.net/wiki/TableListTileWrapper
Additionally, here is a link to some screenshots for Tablelist:
On 1/24/07, Boris Borcic [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chris Mellon wrote:
Using either win32 or wxPython you will be able to produce bitmaps
directly, without needing to create a visible window.
Some quick dirty wxPython code
def getTextBitmap(text, font, fgcolor, bgcolor):
dc
Hi
Just for info - one of the reasons I stopped using Tkinter a few years ago
was for the lack of print support (preview ...) - is there such an
extension today ?
Same for me, it was a point for what I choosed wx.
Nowadays, I'd say users commonly accept to get pdf reports instead of
direct
Hello.
Why does not work?
--
import email.message
import smtplib
import time
m=email.message.Message()
m.set_type(multipart/mixed)
m[From]=Sergey Dorofeev [EMAIL PROTECTED]
m[To]=Sergey Dorofeev [EMAIL PROTECTED]
m[Date]=time.asctime()
m[Subject]=test
p1=email.message.Message()
HI Friends
This blog is very useful to all sections of people.
For Pc trouble shooting skills,Linux,Html Webdesigning,Free
softwares,Networking skills,Gaming news and For Tips visit the blog:
http://technodata.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Does anyone know about a good regular expression for URL extracting?
J.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Sweet!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Well my example function was simply taking a string and printing, but
most of my cases would be expecting a list, dictionary or some other
custom object. Still propose not to validate the type of data being
passed in?
Thanks.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Just inclined to fire up python to decode the latter part, just to
realise i've got dictd binding yet ;-)
Probably injected 2 instances of pythons in the spammer thread, for
completion's sake.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], abcd wrote:
Well my example function was simply taking a string and printing, but
most of my cases would be expecting a list, dictionary or some other
custom object. Still propose not to validate the type of data being
passed in?
Yes because usually you don't expect a
Hey everyone, I have a question about python threads. Before anyone
goes further, this is not a debate about threads vs. processes, just a
question.
With that, are python threads reliable? Or rather, are they safe? I've
had some strange errors in the past, I use threading.lock for my
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Johny [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone know about a good regular expression for URL extracting?
Extracting URLs from what?
If it is HTML, then I'd look at some existing HTML parsing modules like
Beautiful Soup and Barnes' HTMLData.
--
Philip
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Carl J. Van Arsdall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
| Hey everyone, I have a question about python threads. Before anyone
| goes further, this is not a debate about threads vs. processes, just a
| question.
|
| With that, are python threads reliable? Or rather, are
On 1/23/07, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The major complaint I have about Python is that the packages
which connect it to other software components all seem to have
serious problems. As long as you don't need to talk to anything
outside the Python world, you're fine. But once you
Harry George wrote:
John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
You experience isn't shared by everyone. Some of us find Python the
most functional and portable of the candidates you mention.
The language is fine. It's the bindings to other packages that
are the problem. There are three
Well my example function was simply taking a string and printing, but
most of my cases would be expecting a list, dictionary or some other
custom object. Still propose not to validate the type of data being
passed in?
Thanks.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 02:40, Paul McGuire wrote:
The points should be aligned on a log-log plot to be a power function.
As Robert Kern stated before, this problem should be not worse than
O(n**3) - how have you implemented it?
Sure enough, the complete equation is t = 5e-05exp(1.1n), or t
On 24 Jan 2007 17:12:19 GMT, Nick Maclaren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Carl J. Van Arsdall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
| Hey everyone, I have a question about python threads. Before anyone
| goes further, this is not a debate about threads vs. processes, just a
|
Yes because usually you don't expect a list or dictionary but some object
that *acts* like a list or dictionary. Or you even expect just some
aspects of the type's behavior. For example that it is something you can
iterate over.
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
good point. is there
On 1/24/07, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Harry George wrote:
John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
You experience isn't shared by everyone. Some of us find Python the
most functional and portable of the candidates you mention.
The language is fine. It's the bindings to other
Carl Does anyone have any conclusive evidence that python threads/locks
Carl are safe or unsafe?
In my experience Python threads are generally safer than the programmers
that use them. ;-)
Skip
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 04:58, Wang Shuhao wrote:
To keep the question simple, I've set PATH= in cygwin.bat to avoid
python initialze sys.path from Windows' PATH environment.
The simple answer is that sys.path has nothing to do with the PATH
environment variable.
sys.path is initialized from
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 09:12, BJ Swope wrote:
Both examples have included the cardinal sin in smtp...
They both send the message text followed by new line dot new line.
The smtp protocol specifically mentions CRLF dot CRLF. Please
please please use \r\n.\r\n in your code...
No. The SMTP
On 24 Jan, 02:50, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The major complaint I have about Python is that the packages
which connect it to other software components all seem to have
serious problems. As long as you don't need to talk to anything
outside the Python world, you're fine.
I think
On 23 Sty, 10:59, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone!
I have a piece of code that looks like this:
if len(BuildList) 0:
print The script found %d game directories: % len(BuildList)
print
num = 0
for i in BuildList:
print str(num) ++ i
num =
Does anyone know if the Zeus IDE is compatible with Python 2.5?
I sent an email to Zeus a couple days ago but have not heard anything.
Thanks,
Dan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
abcd wrote:
good point. is there place that documents what methods/attrs I should
check for on an object? for example, if its a list that I expect I
should verify the object that is passed in has a ??? function? etc.
Don't check, try. Catch a possible exception, and continue with another
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 14:21, abcd wrote:
Yes because usually you don't expect a list or dictionary but some object
that *acts* like a list or dictionary. Or you even expect just some
aspects of the type's behavior. For example that it is something you can
iterate over.
Ciao,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Carl Does anyone have any conclusive evidence that python threads/locks
Carl are safe or unsafe?
In my experience Python threads are generally safer than the programmers
that use them. ;-)
Haha, yea, tell me about it. The whole GIL thing made me nervous
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 13:02, Sergey Dorofeev wrote:
Why does not work?
Some details please?
--
Gabriel Genellina
Softlab SRL
__
Preguntá. Respondé. Descubrí.
Todo lo que querías saber, y lo que ni
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
| |
| | Does anyone have any conclusive evidence that python threads/locks are
| | safe or unsafe?
|
| Unsafe. They are built on top of unsafe primitives (POSIX, Microsoft
| etc.) Python will shield you from some
Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In
the example above, you can validate that fileobject has a write
attribute: getattr(fileobject, write). But I'd only do that if I
have a good reason (perhaps if the file is used after some lengthy
calculation,and I want to be sure that I will
abcd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well my example function was simply taking a string and printing, but
most of my cases would be expecting a list, dictionary or some other
custom object. Still propose not to validate the type of data being
passed in?
There are many people here who will indeed
On 24 Jan 2007 18:21:38 GMT, Nick Maclaren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
| |
| | Does anyone have any conclusive evidence that python threads/locks are
| | safe or unsafe?
|
| Unsafe. They are built on top of unsafe
On Thu, 2007-01-11 at 08:41 -0600, Chris Mellon wrote:
On 11 Jan 2007 15:01:48 +0100, Neil Cerutti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2007-01-11, Frederic Rentsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I derive a class from another one because I need a few extra
features, is there a way to promote the base
Chris Mellon wrote:
On 24 Jan 2007 18:21:38 GMT, Nick Maclaren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
I'm aware of the issues with the POSIX threading model. I still stand
by my statement - bringing up the problems with the provability of
correctness in the POSIX model amounts to FUD in
On Jan 24, 11:21 am, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At Wednesday 24/1/2007 02:40, Paul McGuire wrote:
The points should be aligned on a log-log plot to be a power function.
As Robert Kern stated before, this problem should be not worse than
O(n**3) - how have you implemented
On 1/24/07, Cliff Wells [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2007-01-11 at 08:41 -0600, Chris Mellon wrote:
On 11 Jan 2007 15:01:48 +0100, Neil Cerutti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2007-01-11, Frederic Rentsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I derive a class from another one because I need a few
On Jan 24, 10:20 am, Johny [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone know about a good regular expression for URL extracting?
J.
Google turns this up:
http://geekswithblogs.net/casualjim/archive/2005/12/01/61722.aspx
But I've seen other re's for this problem that are hundreds of
characters long.
Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 1/24/07, Giovanni Bajo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
That page is legal babble, trying to trick you into buying (or making your
boss buy) a commercial license. The Qt Open Source edition *IS* GPL and thus
it falls under all the normal GPL
I am writing my first python script and I'm guessing this is something
obvious but I can't find any examples of doing something like this. I
have a python script that is running a vbscript through cscript.exe.
The vbscript looks up a server name, username, password etc and returns
these values in
On Wed, 2007-01-24 at 12:57 -0600, Chris Mellon wrote:
In Python, you can do this simply by re-assigning the __class__. I'm
not convinced that your type system makes sense, here though. Any
reasonable ORM should be able to persist and reload an object without
losing the type information.
Matthew Woodcraft a écrit :
abcd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well my example function was simply taking a string and printing, but
most of my cases would be expecting a list, dictionary or some other
custom object. Still propose not to validate the type of data being
passed in?
There are
Paul McGuire wrote:
And the purpose/motivation for reimplementing it better would be
what, exactly? So I can charge double for it?
So you can have accurate results, and you get a good linear solver out of the
process. The method you use is bad in terms of accuracy as well as efficiency.
--
On Wed, 2007-01-24 at 11:37 -0800, Cliff Wells wrote:
class Person: # assume this is something from the ORM
name = Kenny
class PersonRow ( Person ):
pass
def flatten_person ( p ):
return spanomg, you've killed %p/span % p.name
def flatten_personrow ( p ):
return
1 - 100 of 228 matches
Mail list logo