Pyrex 0.9.6.4 is now available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python/Pyrex/
Mostly just bug fixes in this release; see CHANGES.txt on
the web site for details.
What is Pyrex?
--
Pyrex is a language for writing Python extension modules.
It lets you freely mix
At one stage, Monty Python's Flying Circus was going to be called
Owl Stretching Time.
If that had eventuated, then presumably we would all be disussing the Owl
programming language on comp.lang.owl
--
Real email address? Rule 1.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have a big problem. I have a list of files that my script find and
list them in a little gui.
I need this function:
when i d-click on each item, I want explorer opens and selects that
item inside windows explorer.
like that beautiful buttom in iTunes.
Thanks in advane.
Farshid Ashouri.
--
No , I tell you in brief what exactlly Islam is. (I know this is now a
good location but excuse me this time)
I was muslem for 25 years and happily not now. I read quran (muslem's
book) every day and it is full of inhuman words.
rozbeh(salman) and mohhamad made this book to **ck their people. if
We seek the following sort of experience / skill for developer
resources (if u do not qualify - we offer a handsome referral fee if
you refer someone that is succesfully placed:-) .
C Programming 5 years
C++ Programming 2 years
SQL Programming 2 years
Software Design 2 years
Software
Hi !
I'm trying to build an client/server app based on Pyro and sqlite3.
But I have a problem using sqlite3 on the server
I got this error :
sqlite3.ProgrammingError: ('SQLite objects created in a thread can
only be used
in that same thread.The object was created in thread id 240 and this
is
Hi,
Under Windows XP os.access has a strange behaviour:
I create a folder test under e:
then os.access('e:\\test', os.W_OK) returns True. Everything's ok.
Now I move My Documents to this e:\test folder
Then os.access('e:\\test', os.W_OK) returns False !!
but this works:
f =
Although I'm a python fan; for that kind of stuff, I use autohotkey (
http://www.autohotkey.com/download/ )
Best,
Sergio
On Dec 1, 2007 3:30 AM, farsheed [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a big problem. I have a list of files that my script find and
list them in a little gui.
I need this
Russ P. wrote:
I agree that Python is not a good name for a programming language,
Why not?
BTW, is Windows a great name for an operating system?
If I had invented Python, I would have called it Newton or Euler,
arguably the greatest scientist and mathematician ever,
respectively. Then
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
New name Pytn may be better, do you think so ?
No. How would you pronounce it? Pai-tn?
Why don't you create a fork where the only difference is the name?
Regards,
Björn
--
BOFH excuse #194:
We only support a 1200 bps connection.
--
farsheed wrote:
I have a big problem. I have a list of files that my script find and
list them in a little gui.
I need this function:
when i d-click on each item, I want explorer opens and selects that
item inside windows explorer.
like that beautiful buttom in iTunes.
Experiment with:
On Dec 1, 4:11 am, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
New name Pytn may be better, do you think so ?
No. How would you pronounce it? Pai-tn?
Why don't you create a fork where the only difference is the name?
Regards,
Björn
--
BOFH excuse
That was great. Thanks so so much.
can you tell me where can I find that kind of trips?
Thanks Again.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
greg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not necessarily. A python is a sleek and powerful
creature, which are good associations for a programming
language. The word also hints at a bit of danger and
excitement. On the whole, I think it's a good name.
I remember reading
farsheed wrote:
That was great. Thanks so so much.
can you tell me where can I find that kind of trips?
(assuming kind of tips)
I stuck explorer command line options into Google and... Bingo!
(All right, I'm cheating a bit: I knew that explorer *had* command
I agree that Python is not a good name for a programming language, but
I'm afraid we're stuck with it.
Well, the language was going to be called One of the cross beams
has gone out askew on the treadle but that was a little unwieldy
and hard to understand when mumbled in a hury. Searching for
On Dec 1, 1:42 am, waltbrad [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello. I'm brand new to Python.
Where on my system do I have to place these files before the
interpreter will import them?
In this case, odbchelper.py is a module you are trying to import.
http://docs.python.org/tut/node8.html
One
On 1 Dic, 00:10, Martin v. Löwis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would like to know if such function would be correct for verifying
if a link is broken and/or circular.
def isvalidlink(path):
assert os.path.islink(path)
try:
os.stat(path)
except os.error:
Hi,
On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 14:55:08 -0600
Robert Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tartifola wrote:
Hi,
I'm working with numerical array and I'm a little lost on a particular
sorting of one of them. In particular I have an array like
a = array([[8,4,1],[2,0,9]])
and I need to sort
On 30/11/2007, Gerardo Herzig [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You will be eaten by the Snake-Ra god tonight!
Wasn't Ra the Sun god?
Dotan Cohen
http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il
א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת
A: Because it messes up the order in which people
On 01/12/2007, Aaron Watters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 30, 9:58 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now, python3000 is coming. It's the best time to rename!
Yes, but Thong would be a better name,
due to the minimalist syntax and the
attraction/repulsion/catatonic revulsion effect it has with
Dotan Cohen írta:
On 01/12/2007, Aaron Watters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 30, 9:58 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now, python3000 is coming. It's the best time to rename!
Yes, but Thong would be a better name,
due to the minimalist syntax and the
attraction/repulsion/catatonic revulsion
slomo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
print line
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
But I want to get a string:
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
How do you make it?
line.decode('unicode-escape')
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 1 Des, 07:02, Donn Ingle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[1]http://www.python.org/pypi/desktop
Oh, just saw this link and fetched the code -- will have a look around.
The dialogue box support isn't in the released version, but I'll
either upload a new release, or I'll make the code available
How to read strings cantaining escape character from a file and use it
as escape sequences?
for example, a file 'unicodes.txt' has contents:
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
Now,
file = open('unicodes.txt')
line = file.readline()
line
'\\u0050\\u0079\\u0074\\u0068\\u006f\\u006e\n'
On 01/12/2007, Russ P. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Speaking of stupid names, what does C++ mean? I think it's the grade
you get when you just barely missed a B--. But I can't deny that it
*is* good for searching.
C was named after the B programming language, as it was inspired and
meant to
On 01/12/2007, Tóth Csaba [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
man.. :)) the biggest point in this thread :DD
btw in my country not much, because we write it szex :DD
tsabi
We got you beat: סקס. Try that on a Latin keyboard!
Actually, szex might be a great name, as it implies the meaning
without
WOW! Great! Thanks, Duncan.
On 12월2일, 오전12시33분, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
slomo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
print line
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
But I want to get a string:
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
How do you make it?
line.decode('unicode-escape')
Also alot of times in the interactive interpeter it will show you charater
codes!
On Dec 1, 2007 6:04 PM, slomo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
WOW! Great! Thanks, Duncan.
On 12월2일, 오전12시33분, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
slomo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
print line
Dotan Cohen wrote:
C was named after the B programming language, as it was inspired
and meant to replace it. C++ is obviously C+1
Strictly speaking, C++ evalutes to C, but C is incremented
afterwards.
Regards,
Björn
--
BOFH excuse #307:
emissions from GSM-phones
--
Well in the future we will ask the internet god Google to guide us in
making the name!
On Dec 1, 2007 7:36 AM, Joseph king [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
sorry for not responding to the thread the regular way...[cough]
just to prove everyone i counted what was found while searching python in
Well in the future we will ask the internet god Google to guide us in
making the name!
On Dec 1, 2007 6:02 PM, Dotan Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 01/12/2007, Tóth Csaba [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
man.. :)) the biggest point in this thread :DD
btw in my country not much, because we write
Please post in the Python Wiki under the jobs
On Dec 1, 2007 9:38 AM, arnold [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We seek the following sort of experience / skill for developer
resources (if u do not qualify - we offer a handsome referral fee if
you refer someone that is succesfully placed:-) .
C
Because they use two different API's to execute your code!
On Nov 30, 2007 9:09 PM, whatazor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I made a little application with multithreading in winxp with
python2.5. An event generated from a third part software is the
trigger for the creation of progress bar
I would like to introduce CoCo/r to the Python world. CoCo/r is an scanner
generator and LL(k) parser generator which has already been ported to many
languages. CocoPy 1.0.3b1 can be found in the Python Package Index.
Features:
- The generated scanner and parser are completely independant.
how to earn money different tips tricks
to read more
http://bigfatcash.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Calvin wrote:
On Nov 30, 3:07 pm, Wang, Harry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
$$ TestCase ID : 001
Step : deleteDvc,206268
Result Eval type : XmlChk
Step : deleteDvc,206269
Result Eval type : XmlChk
Traceback (most recent call last):
File C:\UDR2\UDRxmlGateway.py, line 388, in module
On Dec 1, 2007 12:34 PM, Bjoern Schliessmann
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dotan Cohen wrote:
C was named after the B programming language, as it was inspired
and meant to replace it. C++ is obviously C+1
Strictly speaking, C++ evalutes to C, but C is incremented
afterwards.
I guess
Giampaolo Rodola' wrote:
On 1 Dic, 00:10, Martin v. L�wis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would like to know if such function would be correct for verifying
if a link is broken and/or circular.
def isvalidlink(path):
assert os.path.islink(path)
try:
os.stat(path)
Please don't. This job is not even vaguely python related.
On Sat, 2007-12-01 at 18:42 +0100, James Matthews wrote:
Please post in the Python Wiki under the jobs
On Dec 1, 2007 9:38 AM, arnold [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We seek the following sort of experience / skill for developer
On 01/12/2007, Bjoern Schliessmann
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Strictly speaking, C++ evalutes to C, but C is incremented
afterwards.
:) I will remember that!
Dotan Cohen
http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il
א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת
A: Because it messes
On 2007-12-01, Bjoern Schliessmann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dotan Cohen wrote:
C was named after the B programming language, as it was inspired
and meant to replace it. C++ is obviously C+1
Strictly speaking, C++ evalutes to C, but C is incremented
afterwards.
Bjarne was only interested in
On Dec 1, 2:10 am, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Russ P. wrote:
I agree that Python is not a good name for a programming language,
Why not?
Think about proposing its use to someone who has never heard of it
(which I did not too long ago). As the OP pointed out, a
John Machin wrote:
On Dec 1, 2:12 pm, Joshua Kugler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
x = __import__(m)
Have you ever tried print m, x.__file__ here to check that the modules
are being found where you expect them to be found?
No, I haven't, but I do know for a fact that the only
On Sat, 2007-12-01 at 12:10 -0800, Russ P. wrote:
On Dec 1, 2:10 am, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Russ P. wrote:
I agree that Python is not a good name for a programming language,
Why not?
Think about proposing its use to someone who has never heard of it
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
But now I have a more technical question. when I run this command, I
saw that the windows explorer did not refresh,example: I have two
files in a folder and i use that command to select them from command
line, the first one will be selected, but after running the command
for second file, the
Tartifola wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 14:55:08 -0600
Robert Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
numpy questions are best asked on the numpy-discussion mailing list since
everyone there automatically knows that you are talking about numpy arrays
and
not just misnaming lists. ;-)
hi there,
for some days i try to build the boost.python tutorial hello world
without bjam on winxp by using mingw.
so i wrote a *.bat-file like the following:
// --- snip
--
@echo off
SETLOCAL
SET
On Dec 1, 12:47 pm, J. Clifford Dyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, 2007-12-01 at 12:10 -0800, Russ P. wrote:
On Dec 1, 2:10 am, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Russ P. wrote:
I agree that Python is not a good name for a programming language,
Why not?
To answer indirectly, usually the EAFP (easier to ask forgiveness than
permission) approach works better for this kind of thing.
try:
f = open('e:\\test\\test', 'a')
f.write('abc')
f.close()
except IOError:
print couldn't write test file, continuing...
On Dec 1, 2007 1:48 AM, Yann
I'm having great fun playing with Markov chains. I am making a
dictionary of all the words in a given string, getting a count of how
many appearances word1 makes in the string, getting a list of all the
word2s that follow each appearance of word1 and a count of how many
times word2 appears in
lysdexia [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
self.wordDB[word] = [self.words.count(word), wordsWeights]
what is self.words.count? Could it be an iterator? I don't think you
can pickle those.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 2, 2:33 am, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
slomo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
print line
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
But I want to get a string:
\u0050\u0079\u0074\u0068\u006f\u006e
How do you make it?
line.decode('unicode-escape')
Amazing what you can find in
Are you opening the file in binary mode (rb) before doing pickle.load on it?
On 01 Dec 2007 14:13:33 -0800, Paul Rubin
http://phr.cx@nospam.invalid wrote:
lysdexia [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
self.wordDB[word] = [self.words.count(word), wordsWeights]
what is self.words.count? Could it
J. Clifford Dyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
...Perl is named for a knitting technique, Lisp is named for a
speech impediment...
I can't figure out whether you're being serious or not but, for the
record, those are not where the names of those two languages come
from.
On Dec 2, 8:40 am, Russ P. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
None. None of them are good names by my criteria. But then, a name is
only a name. One of the few names I like is Pascal, because he was a
great mathematician and scientist.
After thinking about it a bit, here are examples of what I would
On Dec 2, 9:13 am, Paul Rubin http://[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
lysdexia [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
self.wordDB[word] = [self.words.count(word), wordsWeights]
what is self.words.count? Could it be an iterator? I don't think you
can pickle those.
Wht??
self.words is obviously an
On Dec 1, 2:58 pm, farsheed [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
But now I have a more technical question. when I run this command, I
saw that the windows explorer did not refresh,example: I have two
files in a folder and i use that command to select them from command
line, the first one will be
John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
self.words is obviously an iterable (can you see for word in
self.words in his code?), probably just a list.
It could be a file, in which case its iterator method would read lines
from the file and cause that error message. But I think the answer is
that
Py'ites
I am using pdb to check my code, and I would like to put a statement
like equivalent of C++gdbcatch throw.
Basically, I would like debugger to start as soon as an exception is
thrown. How may I do it?
Thanks
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 2, 8:59 am, lysdexia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm having great fun playing with Markov chains. I am making a
dictionary of all the words in a given string, getting a count of how
many appearances word1 makes in the string, getting a list of all the
word2s that follow each appearance of
Newton was a great scientist, and his name is easy to spell and
pronounce.
Should be, but a large proportion of the population pronounce it so
that it rhymes with hootin as in hootin n hollerin :-)
You can count me in that large proportion. 8^)
By the way, after thinking about it a bit,
Russ P. írta:
Newton was a great scientist, and his name is easy to spell and
pronounce.
Should be, but a large proportion of the population pronounce it so
that it rhymes with hootin as in hootin n hollerin :-)
You can count me in that large proportion. 8^)
The 1 also serves to identify
On Dec 2, 9:49 am, Paul Rubin http://[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
self.words is obviously an iterable (can you see for word in
self.words in his code?), probably just a list.
It could be a file, in which case its iterator method would read lines
from the
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 11:36:44 -0800, Michael Spencer
Can anyone recommend a solution that also synchronizes post read status? If
Google Reader or something like it handled NNTP, I imagine I'd use it to
achieve
this benefit.
Unlike email clients (SMTP/POP)
Michael Spencer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I agree: I use Thunderbird, and it works well. But I read NNTP
newsgroups on several devices, and I would really like to have the
read-status synchronized across them.
Can anyone recommend a solution that also synchronizes post read
status?
I think
On Dec 1, 4:47 pm, Matt Barnicle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi everyone.. i've been chugging along learning python for a few months
now and getting answers to all needed questions on my own, but this one
i can't figure out nor can i find information on the internet about it,
possibly because i
On Dec 1, 4:47 pm, Matt Barnicle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi everyone.. i've been chugging along learning python for a few months
now and getting answers to all needed questions on my own, but this one
i can't figure out nor can i find information on the internet about it,
possibly because i
Dotan Cohen wrote:
C++ is obviously C+1, ie, what comes after C.
Although it was a bit rude to choose the destructive form
C++ instead of C+1. Many programmers are quite happy with
C as it is and don't want their language overwritten!
Also there's the rather confusing fact that the value of
the
John Machin wrote:
Amazing what you can find in obscure corners of the obscure docs!
BTW, how many folks know what bijective means ?
Everyone that can read and is smart enough to enter bijective into
Wikipedia search.
Regards,
Björn
--
BOFH excuse #25:
Decreasing electron flux
--
whatazor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I made a little application with multithreading in winxp with
python2.5. An event generated from a third part software is the
trigger for the creation of progress bar in a wxPython app. This
python app is launched via wxExecute.
I've noticed a different behaviour
Tóth Csaba wrote:
Lets evaluate from the Python3000: Newton3 (N3).
+1 vote from me :)
Nah.
BTW, why exactly do you keep using an X-Face header completely
identical to mine?
Regards,
Björn
--
BOFH excuse #364:
Sand fleas eating the Internet cables
--
Hi,
Just thought some people may be interested to hear that I've recently been
looking at adding true concurrency into Kamaelia, by using Paul Boddie's
pprocess as the core mechanism to allow us to run multiple Kamaelia systems
in the same app. (Since we have thread based, and co-operative
On Dec 1, 4:47 pm, Matt Barnicle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
aye yaye aye... thanks for the pointers in the right direction.. i
fiddled around with the code for a while and now i've reduced it to the
*real* issue... i have a class dict variable that apparently holds its
value across
On Dec 1, 4:47 pm, Matt Barnicle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
aye yaye aye... thanks for the pointers in the right direction.. i
fiddled around with the code for a while and now i've reduced it to the
*real* issue... i have a class dict variable that apparently holds its
value across
Matt Barnicle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi everyone.. i've been chugging along learning python for a few months
now and getting answers to all needed questions on my own, but this one
i can't figure out nor can i find information on the internet about it,
possibly because i don't understand
On Dec 1, 4:57 pm, Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tóth Csaba wrote:
Lets evaluate from the Python3000: Newton3 (N3).
+1 vote from me :)
Nah.
Python is an acceptable name, but Newton1 (or Newton3) would be a
great name. Shouldn't a great language have a great name? I
Hi list,
This is way off topic but maybe somebody knowledgeable can help.
I'm looking for the most minimalist web server ever that does nothing
else than return a fixed static page for every request. Regardless of
what the request is, it just needs to be an HTTP request to port 80,
the web
I've been trying to figure out how to use the container option in a frame
widget in conjunction with the use option with a Toplevel widget. Which
according to the documentation I've read sounds like it will give me a Windows
MDI like application with free-floating child windows within the
Daniel Fetchinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm looking for the most minimalist web server ever that does nothing
else than return a fixed static page for every request. Regardless of
what the request is, it just needs to be an HTTP request to port 80,
the web server should return always the
Ron Provost [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| VARS = [ 0 for x in xrange( 0, 1000 ) ] # Create an array to hold the
This is the same as [0]*1000
which is faster to write, read, (and run).
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Heck, lots of names are
take:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphabetical_list_of_programming_languages
I am surprised to see that Newton is not taken. I urge
Guido to take it while it is still available. Sir Isaac
certainly deserves the honor.
--
I'm looking for the most minimalist web server ever that does nothing
else than return a fixed static page for every request. Regardless of
what the request is, it just needs to be an HTTP request to port 80,
the web server should return always the same html document. What would
be the
On Dec 1, 9:06 pm, Dennis Lee Bieber [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pythons are big, non-poisonous snakes good for keeping the rats out
of a system G
I'm looking forward to Spider(TM), the first bug-free language ;-)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Maybe I found what I'm looking for: cheetah, a web server that is 600
lines of C code and that's it :)
http://freshmeat.net/projects/cheetahd/
On 12/1/07, Daniel Fetchinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm looking for the most minimalist web server ever that does nothing
else than return a
Running this in Python should create a server running on localhost
port 80 that only serves blank pages:
import SimpleHTTPServer
import SocketServer
class MyHandler(SimpleHTTPServer.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_GET(self):
print self.wfile,
server = SocketServer.TCPServer((, 80),
## I was looking in my database of movie grosses I regulary copy
## from the Internet Movie Database and noticed I was _only_ 120
## weeks behind in my updates.
##
## Ouch.
##
## Copying a web page, pasting into a text file, running a perl
## script to convert it into a csv file and manually
.:: Unix and Linux Hacking and Security ::.
1. Unix - Vulnerabilities and Advisories
-- Tutorials and Papers
-- Specific Exploits and Vulnerabilities
2. Unix - Security Tools
-- Unix Security and Audit Tools (Including IDS and Access Control
Tools)
-- Unix Log Analysis Tools
-- Unix Proxies,
Pyrex 0.9.6.4 is now available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python/Pyrex/
Mostly just bug fixes in this release; see CHANGES.txt on
the web site for details.
What is Pyrex?
--
Pyrex is a language for writing Python extension modules.
It lets you freely mix
Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
The reason I need this is that my current best strategy to avoid ads
in web pages is putting all ad server names into /etc/hosts and stick
my local ip number next to them (127.0.0.1) so every ad request goes
to my machine. I run apache which has an empty page for 404
You are my hero man, Thanks a lot.
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Paul Boddie wrote:
but I'll
either upload a new release, or I'll make the code available
separately.
Thanks, give me a shout when you do -- if you remember!
\d
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Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
Maybe I found what I'm looking for: cheetah, a web server that is 600
lines of C code and that's it :)
http://freshmeat.net/projects/cheetahd/
For the sake of on-topicness, there is this:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: ASCII -*-
'''$Id$
'''
from
from SimpleHTTPServer import SimpleRequestHandler
handler = HTTPServer (('', 8000), SimpleRequestHandler)
I think you mean SimpleHTTPRequestHandler. Note that actually reads
the url path and looks in the file system to get the file of that
name, which isn't what the OP wanted.
The OP might
Amit Gupta wrote:
Py'ites
I am using pdb to check my code, and I would like to put a statement
like equivalent of C++gdbcatch throw.
Basically, I would like debugger to start as soon as an exception is
thrown. How may I do it?
Thanks
See this post from less than a week ago.
John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 1, 5:14 pm, Hendrik van Rooyen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
John Machin sj...exicon.net wrote:
Pythons are good snakes; they hypnotise the meaninglessly chattering
bandarlog and eat them. Beware!
What is a bandarlog - I know the
Russ P. Ru...gmail.com wrote:
I am surprised to see that Newton is not taken. I urge
Guido to take it while it is still available. Sir Isaac
certainly deserves the honor.
Does he? Are you aware of how he treated Hooke?
He was a great technician, but as a person, you would
not have had him
Christian Heimes added the comment:
Applied in r59254.
I've moved the code to floatobject.c/h and added PyFloat_GetMax() and
PyFloat_GetMin(), too. The intobject.c file has a similar function.
--
resolution: - fixed
status: open - closed
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jos added the comment:
included torriem's fix.
IMHO, there is no clear solution for this
because this is due to HTTP server's bug
and a bug is the one that you can't predict accurately...
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file8841/httplib.py.diff
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