John Machin:
import foo # used by baz()
import bar # used by spam()
Why bother with the ()?
I code in other language too beside Python, in those languages there
are other things (like templates in D language) beside functions, so
my comment helps me remember that baz() is a function instead
On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 11:58:18AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have yet to see any reasonable definition of a Python value in the
Python docs or elsewhere, despite the fact that a value is one of
the three defining characteristics of an object, a central concept
in Python.
Why does it
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 19:41:20 -0800, rurpy wrote:
I prefer another definition of object: an object *is* a value, rather
than *has* a value. That value consists of identity, type (or class),
and everything else of interest which is sometimes also called value.
Since identity is usually
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 06:06:20AM +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
* Do all objects have values? (Ignore the Python
docs if necessary.)
If one allows null values, I am current thinking yes.
I don't see a difference between a null value and not having a value.
[...]
It wasn't until
On Nov 16, 2:05 am, Arnaud Delobelle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 01:40:04 -0800, Rick Giuly wrote:
Hello All,
Why is python designed so that b and c (according to code below)
actually share the same list object? It seems more
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 08:38:25AM +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
I believe that the language reference says that objects have an identity,
a type and state, but I'm too lazy too look it up. I'd be happy with that
definition.
They do indeed say value, not state. As I said in a different
Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 11:58:18AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have yet to see any reasonable definition of a Python value in the
Python docs or elsewhere, despite the fact that a value is one of
the three defining characteristics of an object, a
On Nov 16, 6:58 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
John Machin:
import foo # used by baz()
import bar # used by spam()
Why bother with the ()?
I code in other language too beside Python, in those languages there
are other things (like templates in D language) beside functions, so
my
W. eWatson wrote:
Has anyone gotten the combination of items in the Subject to work
together? The pylab line here fails:
from Tkinter import *
from numpy import *
import Image
import ImageChops
import ImageTk
import time
import binascii
import tkMessageBox
import tkSimpleDialog
from pylab
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 09:30:45AM +, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
[...]
If you like, you could think of the value of an object as the set of
all possible values to which the object may evaluate in every possible
context, given a particular state of the object.
This definition looks a bit
Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I think he meant None... Or at least, I personally see a distinction
between zero and None (and so do the Python docs). Zero is a value,
whereas None is specifically intended to denote the lack of any value.
None is an 'value' which is intended to
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 19:42:33 -0800, rurpy wrote:
You are saying there is no objective definition of value. I disagree.
I think one can define value in a useful way that is precise,
objective, and useful.
No, I'm not saying that there is no objective definition of value. I'm
saying that the
On Nov 16, 4:15 pm, Meryl Silverburgh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
This is the full source code:
def A(w, v, i,j):
if i == 0 or j == 0: return 0
if w[i-1] j: return A(w, v, i-1, j)
if w[i-1] = j: return max(A(w,v, i-1, j), v[i-1] + A(w,v, i-1, j -
w[i-1]))
Huh??? There is only a
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 07:05:51 +, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 01:40:04 -0800, Rick Giuly wrote:
Hello All,
Why is python designed so that b and c (according to code below)
actually share the same list object? It seems more
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 01:50:16 -0800, John Machin wrote:
def A(w, v, i,j):
if i == 0 or j == 0: return 0
if w[i-1] j: return A(w, v, i-1, j)
if w[i-1] = j: return max(A(w,v, i-1, j), v[i-1] +
A(w,v, i-1, j - w[i-1]))
I am reading this blog
On Nov 16, 9:31 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 01:50:16 -0800, John Machin wrote:
def A(w, v, i,j):
if i == 0 or j == 0: return 0
if w[i-1] j: return A(w, v, i-1, j)
if w[i-1] = j: return max(A(w,v, i-1, j), v[i-1] +
Hi,
I am trying to make numpy build with python 2.6 on windows, and it has
been a bumpy road. Building with MS tools works OK, but building with
mingw is still problematic. The problems are linked to manifest, and
msvcr versions issues. Here is my understanding and how far I got:
- python 2.6
- msvcr 9 is not publicly available on most computers (by publicly, I
mean system-wide), but python 2.6 installs its own version in the Side
by Side assembly folder.
Almost. If you chose just for me, then it doesn't put the CRT into
SxS, but just places msvcr9.dll next to python26.dll (plus a
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 12:04:02 +0100, Gilles Ganault wrote:
Hello
I'm using urllib2 to download web pages. The strange thing in the code
below, is that it seems like urllib2.urlopen retries indefinitely by
itself instead of raising an exception:
Try this instead (untested):
timeout = 30
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 04:12:53 -0500, Derek Martin wrote:
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 06:06:20AM +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
* Do all objects have values? (Ignore the Python
docs if necessary.)
If one allows null values, I am current thinking yes.
I don't see a difference between a
Hello
I'm using urllib2 to download web pages. The strange thing in the code
below, is that it seems like urllib2.urlopen retries indefinitely by
itself instead of raising an exception:
=
timeout = 30
socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout)
i = 0
while i 5:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 02:41:03 -0800, John Machin wrote:
On Nov 16, 9:31 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 01:50:16 -0800, John Machin wrote:
def A(w, v, i,j):
if i == 0 or j == 0: return 0
if w[i-1] j: return A(w, v, i-1, j)
Florian Brucker wrote:
Florian Brucker wrote:
Hi everybody!
Given a dictionary, I want to create a clustered version of it,
collecting keys that have the same value:
d = {'a':1, 'b':2, 'c':1, 'd':1, 'e':2, 'f':3}
cluster(d)
{1:['a', 'c', 'd'], 2:['b', 'e'], 3:['f']}
That is, generate
On Nov 16, 11:04 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 02:41:03 -0800, John Machin wrote:
On Nov 16, 9:31 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 01:50:16 -0800, John Machin wrote:
def A(w, v,
George Sakkis wrote:
On Nov 16, 2:05 am, Arnaud Delobelle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 01:40:04 -0800, Rick Giuly wrote:
Hello All,
Why is python designed so that b and c (according to code below)
actually share the same list
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 01:40:04 -0800 (PST), Rick Giuly
[EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
Why is python designed so that b and c (according to code below)
actually share the same list object? It seems more natural to me that
each object
Hi Guys,
I need to create a Log Manager application that is able to accept log files
with various line (e.g., error messages) formatting, and create log objects
that could be put into a data-base.
Some of the requirements of this Log Manager, from the perspective of a client
program would be:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 19:42:33 -0800, rurpy wrote:
[...]
But I propose that one can define value in a precise way that
captures what most people think of as value, and avoids confusing
objects (or references to them) and the value of objects.
Good luck. I think you're
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 7:21 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Mr.SpOOn
wrote:
C 9 is a base chord plus a the ninth note, but this implies the
presence of the seventh too, so it results in: C E G B D
I don't recall such meanings in the chord
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 11:17:07 -0800, rurpy wrote:
[...]
* How can I find an object's value (if I don't believe
.str(), .repr(), etc)? Use gdb. :-)
I would say the object's value is the value, so if you have the object,
you have its value.
[...]
There's also the
Hello,
I've recently found it convenient to do something like this:
options = optparse_function(sys.argv[1:])
##print options =
##{option_one:4, option_two:[5, 3, 7, 8, 6], option_three:'/home/files'}
#(Note that this is not a dictionary, even though it looks like one; it's how
#an optparse
In other words, using the optparse object to hold as attributes everything
needed by all the functions and methods in the module, and simply passing
it holus bolus to all them and just pulling out what's actually needed
inside the function, even adding new attributes or reassigning old ones
I've just been testing out Jakob Sievers' speedup of Python 2.5.2 by
compiling on freebsd with gcc-4.3.3 (the standard freebsd 6.1 gcc is 3.4.4).
I'm glad to say that his modification did improve pybench overall by
about 12%, but during the testing I noticed that in fact some of the
pybench
Robin Becker wrote:
I've just been testing out Jakob Sievers' speedup of Python 2.5.2 by
compiling on freebsd with gcc-4.3.3 (the standard freebsd 6.1 gcc is
3.4.4).
I'm glad to say that his modification did improve pybench overall by
about 12%, but during the testing I noticed that in fact
Eric S. Johansson wrote:
Aaron Brady wrote:
[...]
one step up from speaking the keyboard is forcing the user to say the same
command multiple times to achieve a single effect. For example, if you want
to
move to the beginning of the line for the end of the line, you can say move
word left
I'm pleased to announce a new release of
Mailinglogger that finally correctly supports easy_install and so works
fine with zc.buildout-based projects.
In fact, MailingLogger has *become* a zc.buildout-based project for its
development...
Anyway, Mailinglogger provides two handlers for the
I am trying to update a program to search for two servers instead of 1
and I am having problems. The two servers are blah1-gt1 and blah2-gp1
It has been working as shown in the example below:
Ex x=blah1-gt1
I tried x=*-g*1
And it did not work.
I have imported both the glob and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
x = [[0] * ncols for i in nrows]
That gives an error... small typo corrected:
y = [[0] * ncols for i in range(nrows)]
Greetings,
--
The ability of the OSS process to collect and harness
the collective IQ of thousands of individuals across
the Internet is simply
pls help me
html page conecting to database sql or .mdb files
pls sent qury
Check out the all-new face of Yahoo! India. Go to http://in.yahoo.com/--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 16, 7:05 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
this string from web by the Regular Expression,
−−−
href=# onClick=ConvertURL2FG('Flashget://
W0ZMQVNIR0VUXWh0dHA6Ly9tb3YuM2dwLmNuL2d1aWxpbi8yMDA4LzExLzExL3l1ZWhvdWppZmVuMDIuM2dwW0ZMQVNIR0VUXQ==233','',
233)
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 4:02 AM, anish mathew
[EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
pls help me
html page conecting to database sql or .mdb files
pls sent qury
I know that English may not be your first language, but please make an
effort to use proper English.
Your question isn't really
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
len a écrit :
Hi all;
I am looking for a little direction in moving from novice python MySQL
to real world processing.
I can connect to MySQL databases and have performed most of the
various select, create, update, insert, etc given the examples in the
various books
--
W. eWatson
(121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N) GMT-8 hr std. time)
Obz Site: 39° 15' 7 N, 121° 2' 32 W, 2700 feet
Web Page: www.speckledwithstars.net/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
For x86 processors:
python-2.5.2.msihttp://www.python.org/ftp/python/2.5.2/python-2.5.2.msi
For Win64-Itanium users:
python-2.5.2.ia64.msihttp://www.python.org/ftp/python/2.5.2/python-2.5.2.ia64.msi
For Win64-AMD64 users:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
In other words, using the optparse object to hold as attributes
everything needed by all the functions and methods in the module, and
simply passing it holus bolus to all them and just pulling out what's
actually needed inside the function, even
Hi,
I'm trying to create a class which inherit a list to change some behavior.
This list should contain other instance objects and has to manage
these instances in a particular way.
1) I need to sort this elements in this list, but they must be sorted
using an instance variable. What does Python
Python 2.5 is the last version for Win9x and NT. Starting with Python
2.6 and 3.0 at least Windows 2000 SP4 is required.
Christian
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Charlie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am new to using swig/C++/python. I got some problem with function
pointers. I posted in swig-user, but got no response. So I forwarded
it here. You help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Hi All,
Yesterday I posted about the question I had of
En Sun, 16 Nov 2008 13:46:03 -0200, W. eWatson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
escribió:
Win 98 --Is 2.4.x The last version of Python for It?
No, 2.5 still works on W98, 2.6 doesn't.
--
Gabriel Genellina
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi all,
Recently I am writing more codes in python with vim so I made some
search for python auto completion plugins.
Finally I found pydcition:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=850
Anyway, it works. But I met one problem. After you have set
isk+=.,(
The dot . becomes
Dear all,
this is really driving me nuts and any help would be extremely
appreciated.
I have a string that contains some numeric data. I want to isolate
these data using re.match, as follows.
bogus = IFC(35m)
data = re.match(r'(\d+)',bogus)
print data.group(1)
I would expect to have 35 printed
John O'Hagan wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
In other words, using the optparse object to hold as attributes
everything needed by all the functions and methods in the module, and
simply passing it holus bolus to all them and just pulling out what's
actually needed
Is anyone familiar or aware of a successful enterprise class project
in Python to control and monitor a cluster of computers?
As a part of a bigger project my company needs to build a cluster
management system. The aim of the system is to control and synchronize
applications. Namely, a central
Mr.SpOOn wrote:
So for example in jazz music it is more common the minor seventh than
the major, so writing just G7 you mean the dominant seventh chord
(with minor seventh) and you have to write just the major one with
maj7.
A minor 7th has a flatted 3rd (ie. C, Eb, G, Bb). Don't confuse your
On Nov 16, 10:33 am, The Web President [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Dear all,
this is really driving me nuts and any help would be extremely
appreciated.
I have a string that contains some numeric data. I want to isolate
these data using re.match, as follows.
bogus = IFC(35m)
data =
On Nov 16, 4:33 pm, The Web President [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Dear all,
this is really driving me nuts and any help would be extremely
appreciated.
I have a string that contains some numeric data. I want to isolate
these data using re.match, as follows.
bogus = IFC(35m)
data =
En Sun, 16 Nov 2008 14:33:42 -0200, The Web President
[EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
I have a string that contains some numeric data. I want to isolate
these data using re.match, as follows.
bogus = IFC(35m)
data = re.match(r'(\d+)',bogus)
print data.group(1)
I would expect to have 35 printed
Before I spend the next couple weeks researching and testing, can anyone
tell me if what I want to do is possible, and possibly point me in the
right direction to get started.
I want to forward any email addressed to [EMAIL PROTECTED] to a python
script that will forward it to all the other
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 12:05 PM, William Gill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Before I spend the next couple weeks researching and testing, can anyone
tell me if what I want to do is possible, and possibly point me in the right
direction to get started.
I want to forward any email addressed to
r0g [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm collecting together a bunch of fairly random useful functions I have
written over the years into a module. Generally speaking is it best to
a) Import all the other modules these functions depend on into the
modules global namespace by putting them at the
On Nov 15, 4:41 pm, Dennis Lee Bieber [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 11:41:17 -0800, Ethan Furman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
len wrote:
snip
Files are fixed format no field delimiters, fields are position and
length
I have created the following program to read a text file which happens
to be a cobol filed definition. The program then outputs to a file
what is essentially a file which is a list definition which I can
later
copy and past into a python program. I will eventually expand the
program
to also
The Web President wrote:
Dear all,
this is really driving me nuts and any help would be extremely
appreciated.
I have a string that contains some numeric data. I want to isolate
these data using re.match, as follows.
bogus = IFC(35m)
data = re.match(r'(\d+)',bogus)
print
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Eric S. Johansson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
here's an example of the problem:
class foo( object):
def cat(self)
self.x=1
def dog
self.x=2
this is legal Python but it's not what you need 99% of the time. There is no
cue to the editor to
MRAB wrote:
On Nov 16, 7:05 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
this string from web by the Regular Expression,
−−−
href=# onClick=ConvertURL2FG('Flashget://
Mr.SpOOn wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to create a class which inherit a list to change some behavior.
This list should contain other instance objects and has to manage
these instances in a particular way.
1) I need to sort this elements in this list, but they must be sorted
using an instance
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 8:16 AM, Mr. SpOOn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to create a class which inherit a list to change some behavior.
This list should contain other instance objects and has to manage
these instances in a particular way.
1) I need to sort this elements in this
Mr.SpOOn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi,
I'm trying to create a class which inherit a list to change some behavior.
This list should contain other instance objects and has to manage
these instances in a particular way.
1) I need to sort this elements in this list, but they must be sorted
Asaf Hayman wrote:
Is anyone familiar or aware of a successful enterprise class project
in Python to control and monitor a cluster of computers?
As a part of a bigger project my company needs to build a cluster
management system. The aim of the system is to control and synchronize
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 7:15 PM, Arnaud Delobelle
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mr.SpOOn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi,
I'm trying to create a class which inherit a list to change some behavior.
This list should contain other instance objects and has to manage
these instances in a particular way.
len [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I have created the following program to read a text file which happens
to be a cobol filed definition. The program then outputs to a file
what is essentially a file which is a list definition which I can
later
copy and past into a
On Nov 16, 12:40 pm, Mark Tolonen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
len [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I have created the following program to read a text file which happens
to be a cobol filed definition. The program then outputs to a file
what is essentially a
On Nov 16, 8:28 am, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
+1. Understanding and accepting the current behavior (mainly because
of the extra performance penalty of evaluating the default expressions
on every call would incur) is one thing, claiming that it is somehow
natural is plain
Hi everyone, I'm searching for something which allows me to write
scripts which handle midi files. I'm totally a newbie in audio
manipulation, therefore any suggestion or link related to this field
is welcome. Thanks in advance.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Mark Tolonen wrote:
len [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[...]
You might want to check out the pyparsing library.
And you might want to trim your messages to avoid quoting irrelevant
stuff. This is not directed personally at Mark, but at all readers.
Loads of us
On Nov 16, 7:34 am, John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 16, 11:04 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Style_over_substance_fallacy
Quoted Wikipedia - instant disqualification - you lose. Good night.
When quoting wikipedia became the new Godwin's law ??
John O'Hagan a écrit :
Hello,
I've recently found it convenient to do something like this:
(snip)
In other words, using the optparse object to hold as attributes everything
needed by all the functions and methods in the module, and simply passing it
holus bolus to all them and just pulling
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 11:02 AM, George Sakkis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 16, 8:28 am, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
+1. Understanding and accepting the current behavior (mainly because
of the extra performance penalty of evaluating the default expressions
on every call would
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
Bruno Desthuilliers:
What is data is another type of sequence or iterable ?-)
The original problem statement was:
I did read it, thanks.
If the problem changes, then the code has to/can change. When you
write code it's better to avoid over-generalization
Asaf Hayman:
We are currently pondering which programming language will best suite
us. The two major contenders are Python and Java.
I think there is also Erlang for such kind of things.
Bye,
bearophile
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Asaf Hayman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is anyone familiar or aware of a successful enterprise class project
in Python to control and monitor a cluster of computers?
Ever heard of Google? ;-)
--
Aahz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) *
On Nov 16, 2:30 pm, Chris Rebert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 11:02 AM, George Sakkis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 16, 8:28 am, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Less obvious is entirely in the mind of the reader.
Without documentation or peeking into the
On Nov 17, 4:44 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Match matches the whole string.
*ONLY* if the pattern ends with $ or r\Z
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have a C extension type, Pattern, where my type manages a
dynamically allocated memory block (of instructions, the details
aren't important).
The basic constructor builds a pattern with a single instruction
(End) as follows:
static PyObject *
Pattern_new(PyTypeObject *type, PyObject *args,
Arnaud Delobelle schrieb:
If you want to simply 'set' the generator (by which I take you mean
'change its state') without without iterating it one step, then what you
need is a class with an __iter__() method. Then you can change the
state of the object between calls to next(). E.g.
class
On Nov 16, 10:17 pm, Massi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm searching for something which allows me to write
scripts which handle midi files. I'm totally a newbie in audio
manipulation, therefore any suggestion or link related to this field
is welcome. Thanks in advance.
Massi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm searching for something which allows me to write
scripts which handle midi files. I'm totally a newbie in audio
manipulation, therefore any suggestion or link related to this field
is welcome. Thanks in advance.
Google is much faster than this
John Machin schrieb:
On Nov 17, 4:44 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Match matches the whole string.
*ONLY* if the pattern ends with $ or r\Z
You think so?
import re
rex = re.compile(abc.*def)
if rex.match(abc0123455678def):
print matched
Diez
--
Its funny, I just visited this problem last week.
http://dulceetutile.blogspot.com/2008/11/strange-looking-python-
statement_17.html
./Ali
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Since many responses to my definition of
value raised similar points, I will try
and respond generally here.
In hindsight, I should not have used the
word value; it is far too overloaded with
preexisting semantics for me to have attempted
to redefine it, even if it is the word used
(but not
I'm very proud to announce the release of PySmell v0.7.2, now with
extra goodness.
Changes:
* TextMate's dialog no longer errors when dealing with a huge number
of entries.
* New --input allows mutation of existing PYSMELLTAGS file; useful
to run after a file is saved
* Analyze the
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
John Machin schrieb:
On Nov 17, 4:44 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Match matches the whole string.
*ONLY* if the pattern ends with $ or r\Z
You think so?
import re
rex = re.compile(abc.*def)
if rex.match(abc0123455678def):
print
On Nov 17, 10:19 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
John Machin schrieb:
On Nov 17, 4:44 am, Diez B. Roggisch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Match matches the whole string.
*ONLY* if the pattern ends with $ or r\Z
You think so?
import re
rex = re.compile(abc.*def)
if
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Since many responses to my definition of
value raised similar points, I will try
and respond generally here.
In hindsight, I should not have used the
word value; it is far too overloaded with
preexisting semantics for me to have attempted
to redefine it, even if
On Nov 17, 7:36 am, Thomas Mlynarczyk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Still, I would like to know why it was decided to
introduce a send() method instead of allowing an argument for next().
Hey Thomas,
A great place to gain insight into the reasoning behind changes to
Python is the PEPs:
On Nov 17, 5:26 am, George Sakkis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When quoting wikipedia became the new Godwin's law ?? :)
Probably at the point the editors started becoming revisionists and
culling anything they didn't consider notable enough.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
jzakiya wrote:
On Nov 13, 5:48 pm, M.-A. Lemburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2008-11-13 23:31, jzakiya wrote:
On Nov 13, 5:21 pm, Alan Baljeu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think you should rethink your post. The first case you posted makes no
sense in any language I know. Also, a whole lot
On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 7:34 AM, John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 16, 11:04 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 16 Nov 2008 02:41:03 -0800, John Machin wrote:
On Nov 16, 9:31 pm, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au wrote:
Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
If you really believe that, you haven't been following this list long
enough. Every terminology dispute always includes at least 1 Wikipedia
link.
Also, you might want to look at this study:
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1038_3-5997332.html
That study has been disputed;
I want to write some middleware to notice when the inner app returns a
500 status code. I'm sure there are already sophisticated loggers that
do this sort of thing, but I'm using this as a learning exercise.
Right now, I wrapped the start_response callable. So when the WSGI
application calls
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