Pyrex 0.9.5.1 is now available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~greg/python/Pyrex/
This is a minor release to fix a few bugs introduced
in 0.9.5. See the CHANGES for details.
What is Pyrex?
--
Pyrex is a language for writing Python extension modules.
It lets you freely mix
Hello!
I'm pleased to announce the 0.7.3 release of SQLObject.
What is SQLObject
=
SQLObject is an object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described
as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant to be
easy to use and quick to get started
Melih Onvural schrieb:
I need to execute some javascript and then read the value as part of a
program that I am writing. I am currently doing something like this:
import htmllib, urllib, formatter
class myparser(htmllib.HTMLParser):
insave = 0
def start_div(self, attrs):
Jim schrieb:
I compiled Python 2.5 from python.org and I get an error message when I try
to import the Tkinter module. Python reports that there is no such module.
It says my Python isn't configured for Tkinter. How do I configure it? I'm
using GCC 4.1.1 to compile the tarball. Thanks for any
jupiter wrote:
Hi guys,
I have a problem. I have a list which contains strings and numeric.
What I want is to compare them in loop, ignore string and create
another list of numeric values.
I tried int() and decimal() but without success.
eq of problem is
#hs=string.split(hs)
hs
Hi;
How can I know the Key c and Ctrl on the keyboard are pressed? Or how
to let the program press the
key Ctrl+c automatically? I just want to use python to develop a
script program.
gear
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
I'm working with wxPython 2.8.1.1.
Does anybody know how to change the foreground colors in a wx.StatusBar
You can get inspiration from the following code, but the problem is you
will have also to draw all the status bar stuff, not only the foreground
color.
I don't know any other way.
hi,
i have basic knowledge of python and wxPython... now i need to know about
message handling in python/wxPython?
could anybody pls help me by giving some info on how to handle (in Python),
'the user defined messages' posted from VC++, i dont know how to handle
messaes in python.
Thanks and
On Jan 29, 11:47 pm, Steven D'Aprano
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Outside of a print statement (and also an except statement), commas
create tuples.
And function calls:
3,
(3,)
type(3,)
type 'int'
type((3,))
type 'tuple'
But here's one I still don't get:
type(2)
type 'int'
type((2))
type
i want to know the difference between 'r' mode and 'r+' mode
1.i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','w')for writiing
i.write('hai')-written some content in text file
i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r')for reading
print i.read()for printing the contents in that text
can any one explain about pickle i read in the book but they have not
provided any example for that so please explain with a simple example
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Beej wrote:
On Jan 29, 11:47 pm, Steven D'Aprano
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Outside of a print statement (and also an except statement), commas
create tuples.
And function calls:
3,
(3,)
type(3,)
type 'int'
type((3,))
type 'tuple'
But here's one I still don't get:
type(2)
type
raghu wrote:
can any one explain about pickle i read in the book but they have not
provided any example for that so please explain with a simple example
Bad google day? Or just to lazy to do it? And what is the book? There are
quite a few out there, some about python the language, others about
raghu [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
can any one explain about pickle i read in the book but they have not
provided any example for that so please explain with a simple example
class Foo(object):
... def __init__(self):
... self.bar = 1
...
import pickle
a = Foo()
pickle.dumps(a)
raghu [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
i want to know the difference between 'r' mode and 'r+' mode
1.i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','w')for writiing
i.write('hai')-written some content in text file
i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r')for reading
print
Hello,
I'm developping an application with python, pyGTK and GTK+.
I've performed many tests by using methods as Popen, popen2,
os.system ... to communicate with Unix (HPUX),
The last attempt is this code written in a thread :
fin,fout = popen2.popen2('ps -def')
line =
ipython is probably what you're looking for.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jean-Paul Calderone:
You might look into the
stand-alone Spidermonkey runtime. However, it lacks the DOM APIs, so
it may not be able to run the JavaScript you are interested in running.
There are a couple other JavaScript runtimes available, at least.
This may be okay too:
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
(And the Amiga could add even more complexity -- I still miss the
Amiga's ability to PUSH a window to the back while STILL KEEPING
FOCUS... Made it easy to type stuff into one window while reading data
from a covering window!)
KDE's window manager can do this (and it
On Jan 26, 10:27 am, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Marcpp wrote:
Hi, when i mount a share with python...
os.system (mount -t smbfs -o username=nobody ...)
the problem is that I'll to be root.
Consider modifying /etc/fstab.
Have a comand to send a root
gozerbot
a python irc and jabber bot
see http://code.google.com/p/gozerbot
you need:
* a shell
* python 2.4 or higher
* if you want mysql support: the py-MySQLdb module
* if you want jabber support: the xmpppy module
why gozerbot?
* user management by userhost
* fleet
Beej wrote:
(2).__add__(1)
Nice. I would have never thought to put parentheses around an integer to
get at its attributes.
James
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thank you for the reply. It happens that, as I understand it, none of
the options that you mentioned is a solution for my situation.
On Jan 29, 9:48 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
The easiest ways to fix that are:
(1) subclass an exception that already knows about Unicode;
But
(2) convert the file name to ASCII before you store it; or
I need the non-ascii information, though, which is why I included it
in the error message.
Then convert it to utf-8, or some encoding you know it will be used by your
terminal.
Diez
--
On Jan 30, 7:41 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(2) convert the file name to ASCII before you store it; or
I need the non-ascii information, though, which is why I included it
in the error message.
Then convert it to utf-8, or some encoding you know it will be used by your
Jim wrote:
On Jan 30, 7:41 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(2) convert the file name to ASCII before you store it; or
I need the non-ascii information, though, which is why I included it
in the error message.
Then convert it to utf-8, or some encoding you know it will be
Brian Visel wrote:
ipython is probably what you're looking for.
or
http://sourceforge.net/projects/pyshell
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jan 30, 8:18 am, Peter Otten [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
try:... raise Exception(ugewöhnlich ähnlich üblich)
... except Exception, e:
... print e.message
...
gewöhnlich ähnlich üblich
Ah, so that's what If there is a single argument (as is preferred),
it is bound to the message
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi;
How can I know the Key c and Ctrl on the keyboard are pressed? Or how
to let the program press the
key Ctrl+c automatically? I just want to use python to develop a
script program.
gear
depends on where you got your input from and what do you exactly want
eg:
It was a little hard to follow your logic of your sample code (writing,
reading and writing again), but
(1)The difference between r and r+.
- 'r+' opens the file for both reading and writing.
- 'r' should be used when the file will only be read.
I am not sure on how you want to store the
Szabolcs Nagy wrote:
I believe the only thing stopping me from doing a deepcopy is the
function references, but I'm not sure. If so is there any way to
transform a string into a function reference(w/o eval or exec)?
what's your python version?
for me deepcopy(lambda:1) does not work in
Pyrex 0.9.5.1 is now available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~greg/python/Pyrex/
This is a minor release to fix a few bugs introduced
in 0.9.5. See the CHANGES for details.
What is Pyrex?
--
Pyrex is a language for writing Python extension modules.
It lets you freely mix
On Jan 26, 11:07 am, Bob Greschke [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm reading a file that has lines like
bcsn; 100; 1223
bcsn; 101; 1456
bcsn; 103
bcsn; 110; 4567
The problem is the line with only the one semi-colon.
Is there a fancy way to get Parts=Line.split(;)
On 30 Jan 2007 05:44:40 -0800, Szabolcs Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
however Ctrl+C is a special key combination: running python in a unix
terminal it raises KeyboardInterrupt exception, imho in a windows cmd
promt it raises SystemExit
No it is KeyboardInterrupt in Windows too.
--
mvh Björn
Thanks for your answers Martin and Peter,
I figured out why python.exe was asking for MSVCR80.dll. The first
time I compiled the library, MS Visual C++ Express 2005 was used
during the build (despite my PATH pointing to MS Visual C++ Toolkit
2003). When I removed Express 2005, I forgot to
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements. These could be called configuration data.
The lazy way to do this: have modules
Szabolcs Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
however Ctrl+C is a special key combination: running python in a
unix
terminal it raises KeyboardInterrupt exception, imho in a windows
cmd
promt it raises SystemExit
Your humble opinion is wrong.
Under windows Ctrl-C raises KeyboardInterrupt just
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip crap]
I do not plan to make a career out of 9/11 research,
[snip more crap]
We have found evidence for thermates in the molten metal seen pouring
from the South Tower minutes before its collapse,
[snip still more crap]
Thermate is the red
powder in the steel
Imbaud Pierre wrote:
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements. These could be called configuration data.
The lazy
Hi there,
I have a problem. I'm using calling shutil.copyfile() followed by
open(). The thing is that most of the times open() is called before
the actual file is copied. I don't have this problem when doing a
step-by-step debug, since I give enough time for the OS to copy the
file, but at
The lazy way to do this: have modules that initialize bunches of
objects, attributes holding the data: the object is somehow the row of
the table, attribute names being the column. This is the way I
proceeded up to now.
Data input this way are almost configuration data, with 2 big
drawbacks:
First off, I am just learning Python, so if there is a more efficient way to
do this, then I am all ears (NOTE: The code below is something that I
was messing with to learn threads... So some functionality is not
applicable for your needs..I just wanted to show you a demonstration)
One
Sorry to waste email space , but I wish to be off this list because I have
tried python and it is too difficult for me.
-Dan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Daniel kavic wrote:
Sorry to waste email space , but I wish to be off this list because I have
tried python and it is too difficult for me.
That's sad. Go to
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
and follow instructions.
/MiO
--
On Mon, Jan 29, 2007 at 03:12:37PM -0800, Pappy wrote:
SHORT VERSION:
Python File B changes sys.stdout to a file so all 'prints' are written
to the file. Python file A launches python file B with os.popen(./B
2^1 dev/null ). Python B's output disappears into never-never
land.
LONG
I have created a class that inherits from the list object. I want to
override the append function to allow my class to append several
copies at the same time with one function call. I want to do
something like:
import copy
class MyList(list):
__init__(self):
pass
def append(self,
Sadly, the group is tied to Python 2.3 for now.
Actually, I got around this problem by using an intermediate process that
happens to handle output on its own (bsub).
On 1/30/07, Chris Lambacher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The subprocess module is probably a good starting point:
Hi,
how do you start the python app? Goes stdout
to a terminal or a pipe?
python script.py
and python script.py | cat behave different.
Maybe sys.stdout.flush() helps you.
BTW, I switched from threads to idle_add for pygtk
applications.
awalter1 wrote:
Hello,
I'm developping an application
jeremito wrote:
I have created a class that inherits from the list object. I want to
override the append function to allow my class to append several
copies at the same time with one function call. I want to do
something like:
import copy
class MyList(list):
__init__(self):
Szabolcs Nagy a écrit :
The lazy way to do this: have modules that initialize bunches of
objects, attributes holding the data: the object is somehow the row of
the table, attribute names being the column. This is the way I
proceeded up to now.
Data input this way are almost configuration data,
Larry Bates a écrit :
Imbaud Pierre wrote:
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements. These could be called
On Tue, Jan 30, 2007 at 10:42:22AM -0500, Jason Persampieri wrote:
Sadly, the group is tied to Python 2.3 for now.
Subprocess for 2.2 and 2.3:
http://www.lysator.liu.se/~astrand/popen5/
Win32 installers for subversion for 2.2 and 2.3:
http://www.lysator.liu.se/~astrand/popen5/
-Chris
On Tue, 30 Jan 2007 15:05:23 +, Hugo Ferreira [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi there,
I have a problem. I'm using calling shutil.copyfile() followed by
open(). The thing is that most of the times open() is called before
the actual file is copied. I don't have this problem when doing a
step-by-step
On Jan 30, 10:47 am, Peter Otten [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
jeremito wrote:
I have created a class that inherits from the list object. I want to
override the append function to allow my class to append several
copies at the same time with one function call. I want to do
something like:
Daniel kavic a écrit :
Sorry to waste email space , but I wish to be off this list because I have
tried python and it is too difficult for me.
-Dan
Hi Daniel,
My name is God, and I am quite new to mailing lists.
I sometimes wonder wether computerizing the whole thing was a good
idea.
Do You
Kartic schrieb:
Hello,
My company has quite a few opening involving python expertise. We are
always looking for python resources (and find it difficult filling these
positions, might I add). Is there any place to find developers' resumes
(like finding jobs from
On 1/30/07, murali iyengar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi,
i have basic knowledge of python and wxPython... now i need to know about
message handling in python/wxPython?
could anybody pls help me by giving some info on how to handle (in Python),
'the user defined messages' posted from VC++, i
On 30 Jan, 16:33, Mikael Olofsson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
See also the Tutor mailing list, which might be a bit better for
starting to learn Python, should you (Daniel) decide to change your
mind. Here's the mailing list's Web page:
Rares Vernica wrote:
Hi,
Does anyone know of any Unicode encode/decode error handler that does a
better replace job than the default replace error handler?
For example I have an iso-8859-1 string that has an 'e' with an accent
(you know, the French 'e's). When I use s.encode('ascii',
Paul Boddie wrote:
See also the Tutor mailing list, which might be a bit better for
starting to learn Python, should you (Daniel) decide to change your
mind. Here's the mailing list's Web page:
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
If you haven't seen much information for
Be Heard at OSCON 2007 -- Submit Your Proposal to Lead Sessions and
Tutorials by February 5!
The O'Reilly Open Source Convention
July 23-27, 2007
Portland, Oregon
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/os2007/
More than 2500 open source developers, gurus, experts and users will
gather, eager to
test, please ignore
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Imbaud Pierre wrote:
Larry Bates a écrit :
Imbaud Pierre wrote:
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements. These
A little intro to Uncle Al.
This bastard is a spook from the criminal agencies.
His job is to harass, disinform and such on the internet.
He has been doing it overtime for many years.
Now he was indeed doing his job in the last post.
Thermate is indeed the correct terminology.
When you search
please ignore
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
En Tue, 30 Jan 2007 05:50:29 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
How can I know the Key c and Ctrl on the keyboard are pressed? Or how
to let the program press the
key Ctrl+c automatically? I just want to use python to develop a
script program.
gear
If you are on Windows and want to trap
En Tue, 30 Jan 2007 06:34:01 -0300, Beej [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
But here's one I still don't get:
type(2)
type 'int'
type((2))
type 'int'
(2).__add__(1)
3
2.__add__(1)
File stdin, line 1
2.__add__(1)
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
It appears to be a bug, either
On Tue, 30 Jan 2007 14:39:28 -0300, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Tue, 30 Jan 2007 06:34:01 -0300, Beej [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
But here's one I still don't get:
type(2)
type 'int'
type((2))
type 'int'
(2).__add__(1)
3
2.__add__(1)
File stdin, line 1
Aahz wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Carl J. Van Arsdall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My point is that an app that dies only once every few months under load
is actually pretty damn stable! That is not the kind of problem that
you are likely to stimulate.
This has all been so vague.
Hugo Ferreira [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a problem. I'm using calling shutil.copyfile() followed by
open(). The thing is that most of the times open() is called before
the actual file is copied. I don't have this problem when doing a
step-by-step debug, since I give enough time for the OS
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Jean-Paul
Calderone wrote:
An integer is a primary so 2.__add(1) should be valid.
A float is, too. 2.__add is a float followed by an identifier.
Not legal. As pointed out elsewhere in the thread, (2). forces
it to be an integer followed by a ..
A space between the
Actually, that's not raw data coming in, that's valid XML.
Why do you need to indent it? Just write it to a file.
If you really need to indent XML, get BeautifulSoup, read the
XML in with BeautifulStoneSoup, and write it back out with
prettify(). But if the next thing to see that XML is
On 2007-01-30, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Tue, 30 Jan 2007 06:34:01 -0300, Beej [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
But here's one I still don't get:
type(2)
type 'int'
type((2))
type 'int'
(2).__add__(1)
3
2.__add__(1)
File stdin, line 1
2.__add__(1)
^
Dennis Lee Bieber skrev:
On Mon, 29 Jan 2007 19:45:47 GMT, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED]
declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
Scripter47 wrote:
Hey
It got a problem with python to connect to my SQL DBs, that's installed
on my apache server. how do i connect to sql? Gettting data?
Hi all,
I was referred to this list from python-help. I've written an extension
module in C which contains several new types. The types can be
instantiated, used, and deleted under Python 2.4.3 on OS X 10.4 without
problems.
However, whenever I import the module Python tries to dereference a
On Jan 30, 2:34 pm, Imbaud Pierre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements. These could be
On Jan 29, 8:54 pm, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Mon, 29 Jan 2007 23:42:07 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
For example the raw data is as follows
?xml version=1.0 ?BlahABCId id=1/DescriptionSomeText /
DescriptionResultPassorFail/Result/ABC/Blah
without spaces or new
Steve Holden wrote:
[snip]
Are you using memory with built-in error detection and correction?
You mean in the hardware? I'm not really sure, I'd assume so but is
there any way I can check on this? If the hardware isn't doing that, is
there anything I can do with my software to offer
On 26 Jan 2007 21:33:47 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi
can someone explain strip() for these :
[code]
x='www.example.com'
x.strip('cmowz.')
'example'
[/code]
when i did this:
[code]
x = 'abcd,words.words'
x.strip(',.')
'abcd,words.words'
[/code]
it does not strip off , and . .Why is
John Nagle wrote:
Aahz wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Carl J. Van Arsdall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My point is that an app that dies only once every few months under load
is actually pretty damn stable! That is not the kind of problem that
you are likely to stimulate.
Is it fair game to ask questions about MoinMoin here?
If not, can someone recommend a resource please?
Dan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi everyone,
First I say that I serched and tryed everything but I cannot figure
out how I can do it.
I want to open a a file (not necessary a txt) and find and replace a
string.
I can do it with:
import fileinput, string, sys
fileQuery = Text.txt
sourceText = '''SOURCE'''
replaceText =
Hello!
I'm pleased to announce the 0.7.3 release of SQLObject.
What is SQLObject
=
SQLObject is an object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described
as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant to be
easy to use and quick to get started
Melih Onvural wrote:
Thanks, let me check out this route, and then I'll post the results.
Melih Onvural
On Jan 29, 4:04 pm, Jean-Paul Calderone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 29 Jan 2007 12:44:07 -0800, Melih Onvural [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I need to execute some javascript and then
Dan Is it fair game to ask questions about MoinMoin here?
Dan If not, can someone recommend a resource please?
Yes, however [EMAIL PROTECTED] will probably yield more
responses:
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/moin-user
I've had problems getting my posts to appear
Ralf Schönian wrote:
Kartic schrieb:
Hello,
My company has quite a few opening involving python expertise. We are
always looking for python resources (and find it difficult filling
these positions, might I add). Is there any place to find developers'
resumes (like finding jobs from
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 29, 8:54 pm, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Mon, 29 Jan 2007 23:42:07 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
the reason I wanted to write it as a file was to parse the file, look
for a specific attribute and execute a set of commands based on the
The re module is used for regular expressions. Something like this
should work (untested):
import fileinput, string, sys, re
fileQuery = Text.txt
sourceText = '''SOURCE'''
replaceText = '''REPLACE'''
def replace(fileName, sourceText, replaceText):
file = open(fileName, r)
text =
On Jan 30, 12:05 pm, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 29, 8:54 pm, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Mon, 29 Jan 2007 23:42:07 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
the reason I wanted to write it as a file was to parse the file, look
for a
On Jan 30, 1:38 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Because 2. is the start of a float-literal. That isn't distinguishable for
the parsere otherwise.
Oh, excellent! I wonder why I didn't think of that--I was too busy in
get a field mode it didn't even occur to me that the . had a
On Jan 30, 9:52 am, Jean-Paul Calderone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A float is, too. 2.__add is a float followed by an identifier.
Not legal. As pointed out elsewhere in the thread, (2). forces
it to be an integer followed by a ..
Which leads to these two beauties:
(2.).__add__(1)
3.0
Hello,
I'm writing a python script for Amarok, I communicate with Amarok
using DCOP.
Now, I have to call DCOP very often and I noticed that every time I
make a DCOP call my program keeps growing in memory size.
To make sure it was DCOP i wrote the small program below:
from dcopext import
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 30, 12:05 pm, John Nagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 29, 8:54 pm, Gabriel Genellina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
En Mon, 29 Jan 2007 23:42:07 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
the reason I wanted to write it as a file was to parse
I'm having some trouble starting PythonCard on my PC.
I've downloaded and ran python-2.5.msi to install Python on my
machine. And PythonCard-0.8.2.win32.exe to install PythonCard.
When I try to run the program I get the following error:
==
Paddy a écrit :
On Jan 30, 2:34 pm, Imbaud Pierre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data.
I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple,
describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than case
statements.
Now, I have to call DCOP very often and I noticed that every time I
make a DCOP call my program keeps growing in memory size.
To make sure it was DCOP i wrote the small program below:
from dcopext import DCOPClient, DCOPApp
while 0==0:
dcop=DCOPClient()
dcop.attach()
It would be helpful if the rules of the game were spelled out more clearly.
The conditional expression is defined as X if C else Y.
We don't know the precedence of the if operator. From the little test
below, it seem to have a lower precedence than or.
Thus, it is desirable for the user to put
Thanks for this great link
On Jan 29, 7:27 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Excellent Technology, and photos:
http://stj911.org/jones/focus_on_goal.html
As scientists, we look at the evidence, perform experiments, and apply
the Scientific Method. The Greek method was to look at the evidence
On Jan 26, 10:52 pm, James Stroud [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, I've been searching for a .resize()-like function to overload much
like can be done for the delete window protocol as follows:
toplevel.protocol(WM_DELETE_WINDOW, callback)
I realize that the pack
On Jan 29, 3:33 am, Eric Brunel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 26 Jan 2007 22:35:20 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, I've been searching for a .resize()-like function to overload much
like can be done for the delete window protocol as follows:
toplevel.protocol(WM_DELETE_WINDOW,
1 - 100 of 151 matches
Mail list logo