Dear Python users,
The Elisa team is happy to announce the release of Elisa Media Center
0.5.33, code-named Surrounded.
Elisa is a cross-platform and open-source Media Center written in Python.
It uses GStreamer [1] for media playback and pigment [2] to create an
appealing and intuitive user
Hi,
Wingware has released version 3.1.8 of Wing IDE, a bug-fix release for all
three product levels of Wing IDE.
*Release Highlights*
This release includes the following:
* Fixed problems seen with Subversion 1.4+
* Properly ignore settrace exception on x64 systems
* Fixed perforce submit for
Hello,
I'm pleased to announce that Enthought Tool Suite (ETS) version 3.2.0
has been tagged and released!
Source distributions (.tar.gz) have been uploaded to PyPi, and Windows
binaries will be follow shortly. A full install of ETS can be done using
Setuptools via a command like:
Hi,
I'm pleased to announce the 1.1.1 release
of circuits: http://trac.softcircuit.com.au/circuits/
This is a minor bug fix release.
== Links ==
Home Page:: http://trac.softcircuit.com.au/circuits/
Mailing list:: http://groups.google.com.au/group/circuits-users/
Download::
Hi friends,
I need to do one client side application which is for uploading files
to remote server with ude ftp. only authenticated users are permitted
to access it, how can i pass the ftp connection in different py files?
Help would be thankful
--
On Mar 24, 3:10 pm, John Yeung gallium.arsen...@gmail.com wrote:
In my opinion, it's especially poor form to use the term
generate in that context when the language you are using to explain
these concepts has very specific things called generators.
In its defense, I'm pretty sure 'How to Think
On 24 Mrz., 05:30, Steve Holden st...@holdenweb.com wrote:
No, there is no certification for Python. Maybe in the future...
O'Reilly School of Technology have plans to offer a Python
certification. But I have to write the courses first :)
If you're done with it I'd additionally suggest the
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 09:53:02 +0530 (IST)
srinivasan srinivas sri_anna...@yahoo.co.in wrote:
Hi,
Does Sybase Python driver module implement multiple result sets from
a single command? Could anyone guide e in finding answer for this?
The site http://python-sybase.sourceforge.net/sybase/
On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 17:19:48 -0700, Mensanator wrote:
And it also gives different results to my function: my function
rounds to places decimal places, yours to i digits. Very
different things.
Yeah, I know all about that. I work in Environmental Remediation.
That's real science, where
On Mar 24, 7:15 am, Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar
wrote:
En Mon, 23 Mar 2009 21:37:14 -0300, R. David Murray
rdmur...@bitdance.com escribió:
Steve Holden st...@holdenweb.com wrote:
Sreejith K wrote:
Try and write an example that shows the problem in fifteen lines or
Kay Schluehr ka..@gmx.net wrote:
On 24 Mrz., 05:30, Steve Holden st...@holdenweb.com wrote:
O'Reilly School of Technology have plans to offer a Python
certification. But I have to write the courses first :)
If you're done with it I'd additionally suggest the honory title of a
VIPP:
Thanx Max - your explanation sorted it :-), and a big thank you to
everyone else also!
From the various posts, Python considers any directory containing the
__init__.py file to be a package. The top level package is the highest
directory (closest to root) with a __init__.py file.
Inter-package
On Mar 24, 7:59 am, Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
...
data is the whole file, but 'less' gives only the two lines...
From this statement (that you are using less), it appears that you are
redirecting sys.stdout to a file or similar - if that is the case, you
may need to flush or close
mete metebilgi...@gmail.com wrote:
I got a problem. İ want to send udp package and get this package (server and
clinet ). it's easy to python but i want to look the udp header how can i
do ?
There is pretty much nothing in a UDP packet header except
from_address, to_address, from_port and
On Mar 24, 2:12 pm, Ant ant...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 7:59 am, Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
...
data is the whole file, but 'less' gives only the two lines...
From this statement (that you are using less), it appears that you are
redirecting sys.stdout to a file or similar
I'm trying with no succes to load modules from an alternate path. When
installing to default location (no --home specifed) everything works
as expected.
$ python setup.py install --home=~
running install
running build
running build_ext
running install_lib
running install_egg_info
Removing
On Mar 24, 1:50 am, Johannes Bauer dfnsonfsdu...@gmx.de wrote:
Sebastian Bassi schrieb:
No, there is no certification for Python. Maybe in the future...
I'll hand out the Johannes Bauer Python Certificate of Total
Awesomeness for anyone who can write a hello world in python and hands
me
I am very confused by PEP-370 per-user site-packages. It is not
mentioned at all in the document about installing Python modules :
http://docs.python.org/3.0/install/index.html.
It seems that --home or --prefix already provide per-user site-
packages capability. Can someone explain what are the
Sebastian Bassi schrieb:
No, there is no certification for Python. Maybe in the future...
I'll hand out the Johannes Bauer Python Certificate of Total
Awesomeness for anyone who can write a hello world in python and hands
me $25000 in cash.
This whole certified foobar programmer is complete
Taken from the url
http://openbookproject.net/thinkCSpy/ch05.xhtml#index15
The built-in functions we have used, such as abs,
pow, and max, have produced results. Calling each of
these functions generates a value, which we usually assign to a
variable or
use as part of an expression.
Is there any python library to solve the below problem?
FOr the below URL :
--
http://tinyurl.com/dzcwbg
Summarized text is :
---
By Roy Mark With sales plummeting and its smart phones failing to woo
new customers, Sony Ericsson follows its warning
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 03:12:19PM -0700, grocery_stocker wrote:
So what's the difference between generating a value and returning a
value?
Well when you return, you would use the return keyword, I would
imagine... I guess generating could mean many things, you can generate a
value by operating
=?UTF-8?Q?Alexandru__Mo=C8=99oi?= brtz...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm trying with no succes to load modules from an alternate path. When
installing to default location (no --home specifed) everything works
as expected.
$ python setup.py install --home=~
running install
running build
running
Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 2:12 pm, Ant ant...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 7:59 am, Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
...
data is the whole file, but 'less' gives only the two lines...
From this statement (that you are using less), it appears that you
Clearly, there's no difference, from the wording you quoted. He uses
three words more or less interchangeably, produced, generated and
returned.
The distinction he's making is not between these words, but between the
built-in functions, which are already returning values, and the ones
that
Rama Vadakattu wrote:
Is there any python library to solve the below problem?
FOr the below URL :
--
http://tinyurl.com/dzcwbg
Summarized text is :
---
By Roy Mark With sales plummeting and its smart phones failing to woo
new customers,
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 5:05 AM, CinnamonDonkey
cinnamondon...@googlemail.com wrote:
Thanx Max - your explanation sorted it :-), and a big thank you to
everyone else also!
From the various posts, Python considers any directory containing the
__init__.py file to be a package. The top level
Top posting corrected for clarity.
CinnamonDonkey cinnamondon...@googlemail.com wrote:
On 23 Mar, 18:57, bearophileh...@lycos.com wrote:
CinnamonDonkey:
what makes something a package?
If you don't know what a package is, then maybe you don't need
packages.
In your project is it
Hi,
does anyone know how to install pyPgSQL on Windows? There is no
package for Python 2.5 on Homepage:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=16528package_id=20458release_id=423036
I've tried to install running: python setup.py install
But getting errors python setup.py install
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
Thanks, Ralph
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mar 24, 4:45 pm, R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com wrote:
Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 2:12 pm, Ant ant...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mar 24, 7:59 am, Sreejith K sreejith...@gmail.com wrote:
...
data is the whole file, but 'less' gives only the two lines...
Carl tg2.u...@gmail.com wrote:
I am very confused by PEP-370 per-user site-packages. It is not
mentioned at all in the document about installing Python modules :
http://docs.python.org/3.0/install/index.html.
It seems that --home or --prefix already provide per-user site-
packages
It's not a redirect to a file. Fuse calls the 'read' function on the
class, the read function does a 'return' of the data, and fuse passes
the data up through the OS layer to be the result of the 'read' call
made by less.
By redirection I meant reading the snapshot file instead of the
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
I like the idea, but I would suggest that the award be
limited to the first 100 participants and that the title be:
Very Important Python Early Responder
I'd pay good money for that if the 'I' could be customized to stand
for Ignorant :)
Daniel
--
Okay, I got fed up with there not being any (obvious) good examples of
how to do bash-like brace expansion in Python, so I wrote it myself.
Here it is for all to enjoy!
If anyone has any better solutions or any other examples of how to do
this, I'd be glad to hear from them.
#~ BraceExpand.py -
Okay, yuck. I didn't realise that posting would mangle the code so
badly. Is there any better way to attach code? I'm using google
groups.
On Mar 24, 12:28 pm, Peter Waller peter.wal...@gmail.com wrote:
Okay, I got fed up with there not being any (obvious) good examples of
how to do bash-like
Hello all,
I am having problems trying installing iPython under XP.
It works great under Linux and it would be great if I could
also use it when I have to be in Windows.
XP Professional SP2 + SP3 (tried different systems),
iPython-0.9.1, Python 2.6.1
During Please wait while running
CinnamonDonkey:
It is neither constructive nor educational.
It's a bit like saying If you don't know what a function is, then
maybe you don't need it. ... have you tried having a single block of
code?
The point of people coming to these forums is to LEARN and share
knowledge. Perhaps it's
Peter Waller:
Is there any better way to attach code?
This is a widely used place (but read the contract/disclaimer
first):
http://code.activestate.com/recipes/langs/python/
Bye,
bearophile
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
2009/3/24 Tino Wildenhain t...@living-examples.com
The simple {foo} expansion you mention should be quite easily handled
with re.sub and a function as argument. So not much more then a few
lines of code.
Could this approach be made to handle recursive expansion? From the example
with the
What one really wants is a re option capable of handling recursive
structures, something along the lines of what PHP has:
http://uk2.php.net/manual/en/regexp.reference.php
Under the 'Recursive Patterns' heading. As far as I am aware, no such thing
exists for Python (yet?).
2009/3/24 Peter
Srini Does Sybase Python driver module implement multiple result sets
Srini from a single command?
I've used it to get multiple result sets from stored procedures, so I guess
the answer would be yes. Something like this:
params = curs.callproc('stored_procedure', params)
while
Peter Waller wrote:
Okay, I got fed up with there not being any (obvious) good examples of
how to do bash-like brace expansion in Python, so I wrote it myself.
Here it is for all to enjoy!
If anyone has any better solutions or any other examples of how to do
this, I'd be glad to hear from them.
Peter Waller peter.wal...@gmail.com writes:
Okay, yuck. I didn't realise that posting would mangle the code so
badly. Is there any better way to attach code?
Yes: Use a news client other than Google Groups.
I'm using google groups.
Fix that, first.
--
\ “Are you pondering what I'm
A non python, but pypi only related question:
Where I can find a reference guide about all what I can do with the
text infos about a pypi egg published?
Looking at others guys code I lear how to make links, bold text,
italic, lists...
For example one time I found how to insert an image in the
it's some form of restructured text, which is described at
http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html
however, there seem to be various implementations; i don't know if pypi
exactly follows what is described there (i know i had a small problem with
some detail being inconsistent with that
Top responses guys! This has all helped increadibly.
Bearophile,
My applogies if I have offended you, but:
1. I can't know much about you from the start - Is kind of my point.
Perhaps it would be better to avoid jumping to conclusions and pre-
judging someones abilities simply because they are
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 15:42:46 +1100, Ben Finney
bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
Jean-Paul Calderone exar...@divmod.com writes:
[snip]
An additional feature which would be useful for the library to
provide, however, would be the setting of euid and egid instead of
uid and gid. This
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 05:06:47 -0700 (PDT), grkunt...@gmail.com wrote:
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
One such tool is trial,
grkunt...@gmail.com wrote:
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
not exactly a framework, but useful while working on small projects - you
On Fri, 2009-03-20 at 11:20 -0700, Emanuele D'Arrigo wrote:
Hi everybody,
I was unit testing some code today and I eventually stumbled on one of
those is issues quickly solved replacing the is with ==. Still,
I don't quite see the sense of why these two cases are different:
def
Peter Waller peter.wal...@gmail.com wrote:
Okay, I got fed up with there not being any (obvious) good examples of
how to do bash-like brace expansion in Python, so I wrote it myself.
Here it is for all to enjoy!
Interesting!
Might I suggest some unit tests? You can then test all the
Johannes Bauer wrote:
Sebastian Bassi schrieb:
No, there is no certification for Python. Maybe in the future...
I'll hand out the Johannes Bauer Python Certificate of Total
Awesomeness for anyone who can write a hello world in python and hands
me $25000 in cash.
This whole certified foobar
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 8:06 AM, grkunt...@gmail.com wrote:
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
Have you already looked at the unittest
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 9:36 PM, Esmail ebo...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hello all,
I am having problems trying installing iPython under XP.
It works great under Linux and it would be great if I could
also use it when I have to be in Windows.
XP Professional SP2 + SP3 (tried different systems),
On Mar 21, 11:06 pm, Ben Finney ben+pyt...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
Floris Bruynooghe floris.bruynoo...@gmail.com writes:
Had a quick look at the PEP and it looks very nice IMHO.
Thank you. I hope you can try the implementation and report feedback
on that too.
One of the things that might
Hello, I currently have a script that uses httplib2 to navigate through a
website and collect some cookies manually along the way. It is an https
that requires a logon, then i navigate through a few pages and the end
result is to dump some info into a javascript and i display the returned
html in
I have an application where I would like to append to the python path
dynamically. Below is a test script I wrote. Here's what I thought
would happen:
1) I run this script in a folder that is NOT already in PYTHONPATH
2) The script creates a subfolder called foo.
3) The script creates a file
On Mar 23, 10:16 am, CinnamonDonkey cinnamondon...@googlemail.com
wrote:
I'm fairly new to Python so I still have a lot to learn. But I'd like
to know how to correectly use relative imports.
Relative imports are *fundamentally* broken in python. You will soon
see that code using relative
someone wrote:
Hi,
does anyone know how to install pyPgSQL on Windows? There is no
package for Python 2.5 on Homepage:
I've installed newest Visual C++ Studio 2008 from Microsoft, but still
no luck
Hello Pet,
you need Visual Studio 2003 to compile extensions for Python 2.5
If you want, I
mhearne808[insert-at-sign-here]gmail[insert-dot-here]com wrote:
I have an application where I would like to append to the python path
dynamically. Below is a test script I wrote. Here's what I thought
would happen:
1) I run this script in a folder that is NOT already in PYTHONPATH
2) The
On Mar 23, 4:16 pm, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
CaptainMcCrank wrote:
I'm struggling with a problem analyzing large amounts of unicode data
in an http wireshark capture.
I've solved the problem with the interpreter, but I'm not sure how to
do this in an automated fashion.
I'd
You could take a look/use the very handy csv2rec function in
matplotlib.mlab, which creates numpy struct arrays.
Marco
On Mar 13, 10:19 pm, per perfr...@gmail.com wrote:
hi all,
what's the most efficient / preferred python way ofparsingtab
separated data intoarrays? for example if i have a
I'm wondering why the SONAME in libpython.so has a minor revision
encoded in it; for example (on Linux):
$ readelf -d libpython2.6.so | grep SONAME
0x000e (SONAME) Library soname:
[libpython2.6.so.1.0]
Because of this, if I compile an app against this library (with '-L/
On Mar 24, 4:57 pm, Dietmar Schwertberger n...@schwertberger.de
wrote:
someone wrote:
Hi,
does anyone know how to install pyPgSQL on Windows? There is no
package for Python 2.5 on Homepage:
I've installed newest Visual C++ Studio 2008 from Microsoft, but still
no luck
Hello Pet,
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
Nick Craig-Wood ni...g-wood.com wrote:
I wrote a serial port to TCP proxy (with logging) with twisted. The
problem I had was that twisted serial ports didn't seem to have any
back pressure.
Not sure if this is Twisted's fault -
do python sockets have
automatic
On Mar 24, 8:06 am, grkunt...@gmail.com wrote:
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
Thanks, Ralph
*Nose
*Trial
*py.test
--
Johannes Bauer wrote:
Sebastian Bassi schrieb:
No, there is no certification for Python. Maybe in the future...
I'll hand out the Johannes Bauer Python Certificate of Total
Awesomeness for anyone who can write a hello world in python and hands
me $25000 in cash.
This whole certified
Heh, thanks :)
Unit tests did cross my mind. I was kicking myself for not starting
out with them, there were several regressions during development, and
there could well still be lurking corner cases ;)
I've since heard that a 'better way' would be to use pyparsing. Also,
I saw that python has
Hi all,
I am making a cross-platform frontend to a sqlite3 database. Which
python GUI toolkit has the best table support? Tkinter doesn't seem to
support them (without additional package installation).
The issue is that the application must run off a flash drive with a
vanilla Python install on
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 12:49:08 -0300, Istvan Albert
istvan.alb...@gmail.com escribió:
On Mar 23, 10:16 am, CinnamonDonkey cinnamondon...@googlemail.com
wrote:
I'm fairly new to Python so I still have a lot to learn. But I'd like
to know how to correectly use relative imports.
Relative imports
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 09:01:01 -0300, R. David Murray
rdmur...@bitdance.com escribió:
CinnamonDonkey cinnamondon...@googlemail.com wrote:
On 23 Mar, 18:57, bearophileh...@lycos.com wrote:
CinnamonDonkey:
what makes something a package?
If you don't know what a package is, then maybe you
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 09:06:47 -0300, grkunt...@gmail.com escribió:
I am looking for a unit testing framework for Python. I am aware of
nose, but was wondering if there are any others that will
automatically find and run all tests under a directory hierarchy.
All known testing tools (and some
deech wrote:
Hi all,
I am making a cross-platform frontend to a sqlite3 database. Which
python GUI toolkit has the best table support? Tkinter doesn't seem to
support them (without additional package installation).
The issue is that the application must run off a flash drive with a
vanilla
On Mar 24, 12:39 pm, Peter Waller peter.wal...@gmail.com wrote:
Maybe I might re-implement this with pyparsing and some unit tests.
In your pyparsing efforts, you might draw some insights from this
regex inverter (that is, given an re such as [AB]\d, returns A0
through B9) on the pyparsing
I've got some Python code (2.5.1) that's compressing folders
on a Windows machine. When the directories get
compressed, their modification date changes. Is it possible
to grab the modification date of the folder before it's
compressed, and then set it's modification date back to it's
#Python 2.5
# from Dive Into Python 11.5
import httplib
httplib.HTTPConnection.debuglevel = 1
import urllib2
request = urllib2.Request('http://localhost/test/atom.xml')
opener = urllib2.build_opener()
feeddata = opener.open(request).read()
It doesn't show the debug output, any ideas?
--
Q1. I want to access a database and just by pressing the first alphabet will
showup a dropdown list of all the words starting from that alphabet how can
I do that ?
( I know how to access the database but the further problem is unsolved
hence)
Q2. How can I print a document for example bill or
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 17:56:26 -0300, vikram moule shivic...@gmail.com
escribió:
Q1. I want to access a database and just by pressing the first alphabet
will
showup a dropdown list of all the words starting from that alphabet how
can
I do that ?
( I know how to access the database but the
So, for example, if I upgrade to libpython2.6.so.1.1
How do you do that? There won't ever be such a library. They
will always be called libpython2.6.so.1.0.
So no, no minor revision gets encoded into the SONAME.
Regards,
Martin
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi I am using IDLE on Windows Vista and I have a small code.
title = 'C:\Thesis\refined_title.txt'
file = open(title)
I get the following error from Python.
file = open(title)
IOError: [Errno 22] invalid mode ('r') or filename: 'C:\\Thesis
\refined_title.txt'
Now, I can not understand the
Jean-Paul Calderone exar...@divmod.com writes:
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 15:42:46 +1100, Ben Finney
bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
That sounds rather more specific than is needed for the generic
library being proposed here. I'm wary of adding features to an API
that is already quite
Atul. wrote:
title = 'C:\Thesis\refined_title.txt'
file = open(title)
I get the following error from Python.
file = open(title)
IOError: [Errno 22] invalid mode ('r') or filename: 'C:\\Thesis
\refined_title.txt'
Now, I can not understand the problem here ...
Repesat to yourself 1e4 tmes:
jyoun...@kc.rr.com wrote:
I've got some Python code (2.5.1) that's compressing folders
on a Windows machine. When the directories get
compressed, their modification date changes. Is it possible
to grab the modification date of the folder before it's
compressed, and then set it's
Atul. wrote:
Hi I am using IDLE on Windows Vista and I have a small code.
title = 'C:\Thesis\refined_title.txt'
file = open(title)
I get the following error from Python.
file = open(title)
IOError: [Errno 22] invalid mode ('r') or filename: 'C:\\Thesis
\refined_title.txt'
Now, I can not
Mlabwrap allows pythonistas to interface to Matlab(tm) in a very
straightforward fashion:
from mlabwrap import mlab
mlab.eig([[0,1],[1,1]])
array([[-0.61803399],
[ 1.61803399]])
More at http://mlabwrap.sourceforge.net.
Mlabwrap 1.0.1 is just a maintenance release that
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:04 PM, Scott David Daniels
scott.dani...@acm.org wrote:
Atul. wrote:
snip
In your case, '\r' is a return (a single character), not two
characters long. I think its sad that 'C:\Thesis' doesn't cause
an error because there is no such character as '\T', but I am
It doesn't show the debug output, any ideas?
I think like this:
opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPHandler(debuglevel=1))
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Wes James compte...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:04 PM, Scott David Daniels
scott.dani...@acm.org wrote:
Atul. wrote:
snip
In your case, '\r' is a return (a single character), not two
characters long. I think its sad that 'C:\Thesis' doesn't
In article mailman.1847.1237048379.11746.python-l...@python.org,
Maxim Khitrov mkhit...@gmail.com wrote:
Very simple question on the preferred coding style. I frequently write
classes that have some data members initialized to immutable values.
For example:
class Test(object):
def
Rename all built in classes with a capital letter
example Str() Int() Object()
Make () optional for a function definition
class Test:
pass
def test:
pass
Any chance Guido would approve this :-)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Rename all built in classes with a capital letter
example Str() Int() Object()
Why?
Make () optional for a function definition
class Test:
pass
def test:
pass
Why?
Any chance Guido would approve this :-)
In my estimation, the chance that Guido would approve this is less
than
deech wrote:
Hi all,
I am making a cross-platform frontend to a sqlite3 database. Which
python GUI toolkit has the best table support? Tkinter doesn't seem to
support them (without additional package installation).
The issue is that the application must run off a flash drive with a
vanilla
Hello David,
David Cournapeau wrote:
If you need ipython quickly, I would simply try building the installer
myself from sources - as ipython does not have dependency and is pure
python, it should be straightfoward to do a
python setup.py bdist_wininst,
Thanks for the suggestion, it
Martin v. Löwis martin at v.loewis.de writes:
Sorry for not being explicit. With installer I meant the binary
Windows installer you create with command python setup.py
bdist_wininst. In the past we've been able to use
package-version.win32.exe files created with Python 2.5 on older
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 19:10:50 -0300, MRAB goo...@mrabarnett.plus.com
escribió:
jyoun...@kc.rr.com wrote:
I've got some Python code (2.5.1) that's compressing folders on a
Windows machine. When the directories get compressed, their
modification date changes. Is it possible to grab the
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:45:26 -0700, gert wrote:
Rename all built in classes with a capital letter example Str() Int()
Object()
Make () optional for a function definition class Test:
pass
def test:
pass
Any chance Guido would approve this :-)
Unless you're volunteering to
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
En Tue, 24 Mar 2009 19:10:50 -0300, MRAB goo...@mrabarnett.plus.com
escribió:
jyoun...@kc.rr.com wrote:
I've got some Python code (2.5.1) that's compressing folders on a
Windows machine. When the directories get compressed, their
modification date changes. Is it
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:48:30 -0600, Wes James wrote:
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Wes James compte...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:04 PM, Scott David Daniels
scott.dani...@acm.org wrote:
Atul. wrote:
snip
In your case, '\r' is a return (a single character), not two
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 22:48:30 -, Wes James compte...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Wes James compte...@gmail.com wrote:
\T might mean the same thing as \t (tab), but I thought it would be
different...
I guess not:
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