Greetings all,
We are proud to announce the release of LDTP 1.6.0. This release features
number of important breakthroughs in LDTP as well as in the field of Test
Automation. This release note covers a brief introduction on LDTP followed
by the list of new features and major bug fixes which
[reposted in plaintext by a...@pythoncraft.com]
Greetings all,
We are proud to announce the release of LDTP 1.6.0. This release features
number of important breakthroughs in LDTP as well as in the field of Test
Automation. This release note covers a brief introduction on LDTP followed
by the
On Monday 2009-05-11, mail.python.org will be switched to another machine
starting roughly at 14:00 UTC. This should be invisible (expected
downtime is less than ten minutes).
--
Aahz (a...@pythoncraft.com) * http://www.pythoncraft.com/
It is easier to optimize correct code
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
joshua.pea...@gmail.com wrote:
Or, just give me some general advice on learning C++ for Python?
You may want to start with Cython first. It lets you intersperse C and
C level information with Python code to produce extensions. That will
give you a
In message mailman.5354.1241924166.11746.python-l...@python.org, Shawn
Milochik wrote:
I know you've probably all seen this 50 times, but just in case:
http://xkcd.com/353/
Ironically, that's no longer valid in Python 3.0.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sun, May 10, 2009 at 11:58 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro
l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand wrote:
In message mailman.5354.1241924166.11746.python-l...@python.org, Shawn
Milochik wrote:
I know you've probably all seen this 50 times, but just in case:
http://xkcd.com/353/
Ironically, that's no
In message mailman.5282.1241783298.11746.python-l...@python.org, Geoff
Gardiner wrote:
How do I assure myself of the integrity of a Python installation
acquired using apt-get install on Debian and Ubuntu?
apt-get install debsums
man debsums
--
I have a docxmlrpcserver install (kissws.com) that's returning HTTP code 501
when the client makes a HEAD request.
Any idea as to whether that's by design?
Thanks in advance.
Chris Mahan
chris.ma...@gmail.com
gv (818) 671-1709
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On May 10, 7:18 pm, Carl Banks pavlovevide...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 10, 12:40 pm, namekuseijin namekuseijin.nos...@gmail.com
wrote:
theoretical argument like, everything reduces to a function so it
doesn't matter what syntax you use, yet people in the real world are
out there trying to find
joshua.pea...@gmail.com joshua.pea...@gmail.com wrote:
I am a recovering C# web developer who has recently picked up Django
and I'm loving it.
I would eventually like to get a job as a Django/Python developer. It
seems that many Python jobs require that you also be a C++ developer.
Hi Pythoners,
I am using Python embedded in my application (OSX,Windows) and I need
to distribute Python as part of my application.
On OSX, no problem, I got a self contained framework (with dynamic
library and all the modules).
On Windows, I manage to compile Python 2.6.2 with
joshua.pea...@gmail.com wrote:
I am a recovering C# web developer who has recently picked up Django
and I'm loving it.
I would eventually like to get a job as a Django/Python developer. It
seems that many Python jobs require that you also be a C++ developer.
I've seen the C++/Python
Hello!
My application is frozen with cx_freeze. Everything is ok, but on one
PC with Windows 2003 64bit i got cx_freeze fatal error cannot get
importer instance. I don't use zipimport in my python code and i
don't know why i get this error :/
Any idea? How test this error?
w.p.
--
kj so...@987jk.com.invalid wrote:
Below is my very firs python script.
This was just a learning exercise; the script doesn't do anything
terribly exciting: for an argument of the form YYMMDD (year, month,
day) it prints out the corresponding string YYMMDDW, where W is a
one-letter
Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn zo...@zooko.com wrote:
On May 10, 2009, at 11:18 AM, Martin v. Löwis wrote:
If GNU stow solves all your problems, why do you want to use
easy_install in the first place?
That's a good question. The answer is that there are two separate
jobs: building
Rhodri James rho...@wildebst.demon.co.uk wrote:
On Sun, 10 May 2009 08:32:23 +0100, Tobias Weber t...@gmx.net wrote:
In article m2bpq2ngup@googlemail.com,
Arnaud Delobelle arno...@googlemail.com wrote:
A simple Alt-Q will reformat everything nicely.
Now that's something.
Florian Wollenschein a écrit :
Hi all,
here's the main code of thc, my txt to html converter. Since I'm a
beginner it is far, far, faaar away from perfect or even good :-)
What could be done better?
(snip code)
1/ decouple the text = html conversion part from your (or any other) GUI
Germany will provide project-specific aid to the tune of 115 million
euro to Pakistan for next two years.
for more details visit www.empiresnews.blogspot.com
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On May 8, 4:03 pm, Scott David Daniels scott.dani...@acm.org wrote:
Paul Moore wrote:
I have just discovered the python-graph library. I've been interested
in graph algorithms for a long time, so I'd like to give this a try.
But there seems to be very little in the way of examples, or
On May 8, 3:19 pm, (e.g. emre) emregu...@gmail.com wrote:
you might want to check networkx as well, it is considerably well
documented:http://networkx.lanl.gov/
Interesting, I hadn't seen that before. I'll certainly check it out!
Thanks,
Paul
--
alex23 wrote:
GKalman kalma...@msn.com wrote:
from MyClass import *
from MyOtherClass import * # error msg: no such module!
As I mentioned above, the code for MyClass MyOtherClass is in the same
file . This program only works with a single Class in a file. That is
when
the File
On May 11, 10:47 am, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
anuraguni...@yahoo.com wrote:
so unicode(obj) calls __unicode__ on that object
It will look for the existence of type(ob).__unicode__ ...
and if it isn't there __repr__ is used
According to the below, type(ob).__str__ is tried
Talking of stow, I take advantage of this thread to do some shameless
advertising :)
Recently I uploaded to PyPI a software of mine, BPT [1], which does
the same symlinking trick of stow, but it is written in Python (and
with a simple api) and, more importantly, it allows with another trick
On May 8, 5:33 pm, Mikael Olofsson mik...@isy.liu.se wrote:
class test_decorator(object):
... def __init__(self,func):
... self._func = func
... def __call__(self, *args):
... print 'Decorator:', args
... self._func(*args)
Or you could use the decorator
Terry Reedy a écrit :
Kurt Symanzik wrote:
But you might consider decorating the method as a static method
instead since in your example you are not using the parameter at all.
A static method would not require a parameter.
@staticmethod
def print_hello():
print hello
Functions
Hi!
We have a few tests for some module here. These tests are under development
and applied to older versions (with less features) of the module, too. That
means that if I have module version 42, tests A and B can not possibly
work. I don't want to have test failures but I also don't want to fork
Hello,
I'm using http://code.activestate.com/recipes/156178/ to watch a
folder in windows. It's working perfectly, but sometimes when I try to
open the file immediately after receiving the event, it's not ready to
be opened--if I try to open it with PIL I get IOError: cannot
identify image file
You have to wait until IO is ready. In Unix, we accomplish this with
fcntl and the default signal SIGIO, I am not sure how you would do
this in Windows.
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 9:51 AM, justind justin.don...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I'm using http://code.activestate.com/recipes/156178/ to
justind wrote:
Hello,
I'm using http://code.activestate.com/recipes/156178/ to watch a
folder in windows.
Wow, that takes me back. There's a bit more info (and a different
technique) here if you're interested:
http://timgolden.me.uk/python/win32_how_do_i/watch_directory_for_changes.html
Peter Otten wrote:
You have to turn your decorator into a descriptor by providing a __get__()
method. A primitive example:
class test_decorator(object):
def __init__(self,func):
self._func = func
def __call__(self, *args):
print 'Decorator:', args
George Sakkis wrote:
Yes, just return an actual function from the decorator instead of a
callable object:
def test_decorator2(func):
def wrapper(*args):
print 'Decorator2:', args
func(*args)
return wrapper
class cls(object):
@test_decorator
def
On May 11, 10:03 am, Tim Golden m...@timgolden.me.uk wrote:
justind wrote:
Hello,
I'm usinghttp://code.activestate.com/recipes/156178/to watch a
folder in windows.
Wow, that takes me back. There's a bit more info (and a different
technique) here if you're interested:
His problem is therefore likely to be something completely different.
You are correct.
As per the earlier advice, I switched from mod_python to mod_wsgi but
I still see the same error:
[Mon May 11 10:30:21 2009] [notice] Apache/2.2.11 (Unix) mod_wsgi/2.4
Python/2.5.2 configured -- resuming
Context for this question arises from some recent code. In particular the
replace_line method, which takes in a regexp to look for, and a replacement
for when it matches.
It is supposed to work for single lines only (we add ^ and $ to the regexp), so
arguments which have '\n' in them are not
At 04:42 PM 5/9/2009 +0200, Martin v. Löwis wrote:
If you always use --single-version-externally-managed with easy_install,
it will stop editing .pth files on installation.
It's --multi-version (-m) that does that.
--single-version-externally-managed is a setup.py install option.
Both
hellcats wrote:
I have Python2.5 installed on Windows XP. Whenever I double click on a
something.pyw file, IDLE launches and opens something.pyw in the
editor. I would prefer to actually *RUN* the program, not edit it. If
I want to edit it then I'll choose the Edit with IDLE context menu.
So I
Tobias Weber wrote:
Hi,
the guideline (PEP 8) is hard wrap to 7x characters. The reason given is
that soft wrap makes code illegible.
So what if you hard wrap code but let comments and docstrings soft-wrap?
Otherwise it's hugely annoying to edit them. Say you remove the first
three words of
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 08 May 2009 14:22:32 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote:
Scott David Daniels wrote:
rantIt would be a bit easier if people would bother to mention their
Python version, as we regularly get questions from people running 2.3,
2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7a, 3.0, and 3.1b. They run
Hello
It sounds indeed like a runtime library problem...
You should run a dependancy finder (like dependency walker -
http://www.dependencywalker.com/) on your executable, and thus see what
might be lacking on other systems.
I know that on *nix systems there are tools to see more precisely
Mikael Olofsson mik...@isy.liu.se wrote:
George Sakkis decorator function solution seems to work equally well
for
functions and methods. However, I prefer the cleaner encapsulation
given
by a class. Based on those observations, I think I will use the
following approach:
class
In w_adny5q3jzyxjrxnz2dnuvz_u2dn...@pdx.net Scott David Daniels
scott.dani...@acm.org writes:
kj wrote:
... I can't come with an example in which the same couldn't be
accomplished with
try:
# do something
# do something else
except ...:
# handle exception
The only
In article mailman.5375.1241962005.11746.python-l...@python.org,
Geoff Gardiner ggardi...@iee.org wrote:
Aahz wrote:
What directory are you running this from? What happens if you switch to
running python Lib/test/regrtest.py? Taking a closer look, this looks
more like a plain import error.
On May 11, 9:53 am, Adam Gaskins agaskins...@kelleramerica.com
wrote:
Hi all,
-- Non critical info--
I am a fairly seasoned PHP developer (don't shoot, I'm changing teams!:) who
is admittedly behind the curve with OOP. Like most who learned PHP, I
started doing web app backend stuff, but I
Adam Gaskins wrote:
Long story short, I'm tired of doing things in such a hackish manner
and want to write applications that are cross platform (I'd like to
get our production dept on linux eventually) and truely object
oriented.
Adam, there is one notion here that I seriously dislike: you
For the record, and in case anyone else runs into this particular
problem, here's how resolved it.
My original xml_utils.py was written this way:
from xml.dom import minidom
def parse_item_attribute (item, attribute_name):
item_doc = minidom.parseString(item)
...
That version worked
Mike Driscoll wrote:
I've never used (or heard of) the Abstract type...and the guy who
wrote the FAQ was being a jerk.
Who, Peter Norvig?
(from wikipedia)
Peter Norvig is an American computer scientist. He is currently the
Director of Research (formerly Director of Search Quality) at
Duncan Booth wrote:
The __get__ method should be returning a new object, NOT modifying the
state of the decorator. As written it will break badly and unexpectedly
in a variety of situations:
[snip good examples of things going bad]
Ouch! So, does that mean that George's solution based on a
Mmm, we solved half of the cause of this one.
Test runs are kicked off via setuptools's test command. But this
happens programmatically, and successively in one process. But
setuptools's test command clears all modules imported during a test
run from sys.modules - hence it is intended that
Hi everyone,
I am trying to write several attributes from a database table and
using the code below I can write the values however it is only
overwriting on the first line.
I am new to the win32com bit and I would like to know what is the
recommended reference to loop down the page and add
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Thu, 07 May 2009 13:28:10 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au writes:
On Wed, 06 May 2009 09:48:51 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com writes:
On
Mikael Olofsson wrote:
Duncan Booth wrote:
The __get__ method should be returning a new object, NOT modifying the
state of the decorator. As written it will break badly and unexpectedly
in a variety of situations:
[snip good examples of things going bad]
Ouch! So, does that mean that
Any idea why I didn't see this reply on my ng? I only see the reply from
Marco. Can't help but wonder if there is more that is not getting through
here.
Would someone mind forwarding me any other replies?
FWIW I'm using news.east.cox.net.
Thanks,
-Adam
Mike Driscoll wrote:
I've never used
jalanb3 wrote:
... Given a variable name I can use locals() to get the value
Is there a way to do it the other way round
Given the value, can I get the variable name ?
(1) Yes you can in some cases.
(2) You should not, things do not inherently have a name.
With that prelude:
I am trying to do this in a single transaction, the 3 separate
statements work fine, but i am screwed if they are not executed
together.
### db.execute('BEGIN') #
db.execute('UPDATE users SET uid=? WHERE uid=?',(v['uid'],s.UID))
db.execute('UPDATE sessions SET uid=? WHERE
I'm writing a class that derives it's functionality from mix-ins.
Here's the code:
def boilerplate(what): # This used to be a decorator, but all of
the
##what = f.__name__ # function bodies turned out to be
'pass'.
'Validate the user, then call the appropriate plug-in.'
On Mon, 11 May 2009, jalanb3 wrote:
[...]
def replace_line(pattern,replacement):
errors = '\n' in pattern and [ 'pattern' ] or []
errors += '\n' in replacement and [ 'replacement' ] or []
values = [ locals()[e] for e in errors ]
# etc, etc, and eventually:
print
Adam Gaskins agaskins...@kelleramerica.com wrote:
I am a fairly seasoned PHP developer (don't shoot, I'm changing teams!:) who
is admittedly behind the curve with OOP. Like most who learned PHP, I
started doing web app backend stuff, but I have moved to full blown windows
apps in the
norseman wrote:
Tobias Weber wrote:
Hi,
the guideline (PEP 8) is hard wrap to 7x characters. The reason given
is that soft wrap makes code illegible.
So what if you hard wrap code but let comments and docstrings soft-wrap?
Otherwise it's hugely annoying to edit them. Say you remove the
Adam Gaskins wrote:
So I was beginning to learn OOP for PHP, and it seemed to me that abstract
classes were just right for my application. In my application I must
communicate with several peices of test equipment that communicate via
RS-232. Most use SCPI instructions, some do not and
2009/5/10 Tobias Weber t...@gmx.net:
(still not gonna use software that doesn't let me type # because it's
alt+3 on a UK layout; having to re-learn or configure that is just sick)
To use Aquamacs with a UK keyboard, you want to select Options, Option
Key, Meta British. Things just work then.
Hi. I would just like to know which of the versions of python and
pygame would be best to download for use together. I am a windows xp
user.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On May 11, 11:27 am, gazath...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am trying to write several attributes from a database table and
using the code below I can write the values however it is only
overwriting on the first line.
I am new to the win32com bit and I would like to know what is the
On May 11, 2:54 pm, cripplem...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi. I would just like to know which of the versions of python and
pygame would be best to download for use together. I am a windows xp
user.
Look at the pygame website to see what the newest version of Python it
supports and go with that unless
question from a python newbie;
how can i consume in python language, a .NET web service, passing
a string array as parameter in some easy steps?
best regards
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
bav escreveu:
question from a python newbie;
how can i consume in python language, a .NET web service, passing
a string array as parameter in some easy steps?
Unless Microsoft extended the standard in any way, then it should be
just as you consume any web service, I guess. ;)
--
a game
On May 11, 3:09 pm, bav baudewijn.verme...@skynet.be wrote:
question from a python newbie;
how can i consume in python language, a .NET web service, passing
a string array as parameter in some easy steps?
best regards
You're being pretty vague here. Try using Google first...I got plenty
Wow, thanks Nick! This is just what I was looking for!
Thanks to Peter as well. And as for your suggestion that I probably
shouldn't mess with things I don't understand and learn the basics first...
well, that is probably sound advice, but I figured out years ago that I
learn things best by a)
Hi everybody,
I have to fill a web form to authenticate and connect to the internet.
I thought it would have been easy to make a script to do that
automatically
on startup.
Unfortunately, it turned out that the form is written in JavaScript,
and
urllib2 therefore fails to even fetch the form.
Hi,
Just wonder if it's possible in Python.
what I want is to tweak an existing Python class A with no
constructor, so that A() results in fuctory method call?
so o = A() instead being equivalent to:
s = object()
A.__init__(s)
o = s
becomes:
o = my_factory_function( A )
Thanks,
Gennadiy
--
Hello all!,
I'm trying to implement a simple one way communication using twisted.
Sender:
send message
close connection
Receiver:
receive
do something
wait for other message
I'm testing with this simple examples:
Sender:
[code]
class SenderClient(protocol.Protocol):
def
Greetings. I'm working on learning Python and I'm looking for good books to
read. I'm almost done with Dive into Python and I liked it a lot. I found
Programming Python a little dry the last time I looked at it, but I'm more
motivated now so I might return to it. What's your favorite? Why?
It depends on what you want to do. If you still want to beef up on
general knowledge, maybe skim through The Python Cookbook or
something reference-like.
If you feel ready to start doing something with Python, look into one
of the recent titles that applies Python for a specific purpose.
How is the form written in JavaScript? Is it dynamically generated?
In any case, can you just send a POST request if you know the values required?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 1:39 PM, roge...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Just wonder if it's possible in Python.
what I want is to tweak an existing Python class A with no
constructor, so that A() results in fuctory method call?
so o = A() instead being equivalent to:
s = object()
A.__init__(s)
gert wrote in news:d7591495-4661-4243-ad7e-f142d8244e88
@e24g2000vbe.googlegroups.com in comp.lang.python:
I am trying to do this in a single transaction, the 3 separate
statements work fine, but i am screwed if they are not executed
together.
Well you're in luck, Python DBAPI 2 connections
On 2009-05-11, Gabriel gabr...@opensuse.org wrote:
Subject: issue with twisted and reactor. Can't stop reactor
Not having written anything using twisted I cannot help you much with your
code; but, I cannot resist commenting about your subject line:
I suspect that if are having an issue with
Aahz wrote:
... That seems to demonstrate that regrtest.py is indeed a good mechanism for
finding out whether it's a b0rked install!
I agree that regrtest.py looks a good mechanism. It just appears that
`apt-get install python` on Debian and Ubuntu brings no tests with it.
@Lawrence
On 10 Mai, 07:36, k...@fiber-space.de wrote:
On 8 Mai, 17:48, Andreas Rumpf rump...@web.de wrote:
Dear Python-users,
I invented a new programming language called Nimrod that combines
Python's readability with C's performance. Please check it
out:http://force7.de/nimrod/
Any feedback
On May 11, 1:16 pm, samwyse samw...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm writing a class that derives it's functionality from mix-ins.
While waiting, I gave a try at using class decorators. Here's what I
came up with:
def add_methods(*m_list, **kwds):
def wrapper(klass):
for m_name in m_list:
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 1:44 PM, Sam Tregar s...@tregar.com wrote:
Greetings. I'm working on learning Python and I'm looking for good books to
read. I'm almost done with Dive into Python and I liked it a lot. I found
Programming Python a little dry the last time I looked at it, but I'm more
On Monday 11 May 2009 04:39:41 pm roge...@gmail.com wrote:
so o = A() instead being equivalent to:
s = object()
A.__init__(s)
o = s
Actually, it would be more like this:
s = A.__new__(A)
if isinstance(s,A):
A.__init__(s)
o = s
o = my_factory_function( A )
You could tweak:
*) A's
On 10 Mai, 10:40, Paul Rubin http://phr...@nospam.invalid wrote:
Andreas Rumpf rump...@web.de writes:
I invented a new programming language called Nimrod that combines
Python's readability with C's performance. Please check it out:
http://force7.de/nimrod/Any feedback is appreciated.
Looks
On Mon, 11 May 2009 00:48:25 +0100, Rhodri James wrote:
On Mon, 11 May 2009 00:06:34 +0100, Tobiah t...@tobiah.org wrote:
[Snippety snip]
I wanted the bullets to be responsible for destroying themselves, but a
little Googling brought me to points about dangling references and how
an
Sam,
In no specific order (I brought them all):
Wesley Chun's Core Python Programming
David Mertz's Text Processing in Python (older, but excellent)
Mark Lutz's Learning Python
All highly recommended.
Best of luck on your Python journey!
Regards,
Malcolm
--
On Mon, 11 May 2009 17:40:57 -0300, Gabriel gabr...@opensuse.org wrote:
Hello all!,
I'm trying to implement a simple one way communication using twisted.
[snip]
When I call send the first time it works fine, when I call send a
second time the sender hangs.
[snip]
None of the reactors in
One question I ask myself upon seeing a new language is if it is possible
to program amb (amb=ambiguous) operator in it. This page gives a very
nice, code first explanation of amb and how it is supposed to work:
http://www.randomhacks.net/articles/2005/10/11/amb-operator
Hm. I am not sure
namekuseijin schrieb:
bav escreveu:
question from a python newbie;
how can i consume in python language, a .NET web service, passing
a string array as parameter in some easy steps?
Unless Microsoft extended the standard in any way, then it should be
just as you consume any web service,
On May 11, 4:55 pm, rump...@web.de wrote:
On 10 Mai, 10:40, Paul Rubin http://phr...@nospam.invalid wrote: Andreas
Rumpf rump...@web.de writes:
I invented a new programming language called Nimrod that combines
Python's readability with C's performance. Please check it out:
On Mon, 11 May 2009 22:59:43 +0100, Tobiah t...@tobiah.org wrote:
On Mon, 11 May 2009 00:48:25 +0100, Rhodri James wrote:
On Mon, 11 May 2009 00:06:34 +0100, Tobiah t...@tobiah.org wrote:
[Snippety snip]
I wanted the bullets to be responsible for destroying themselves, but a
little
Jean-Paul Calderone escribió:
None of the reactors in Twisted are restartable. You can run and
stop them
once. After you've stopped a reactor, you cannot run it again. This is
the
cause of your problem.
Jean-Paul
I see.
Is it possible to do what I want using twisted? or
I should found
On Mon, 11 May 2009 08:39:48 +0100, Tobias Weber t...@gmx.net wrote:
In article mailman.5400.1242000728.11746.python-l...@python.org,
Rhodri James rho...@wildebst.demon.co.uk wrote:
What on earth are you talking about? '#' has its own key on a UK layout
Not on Apple keyboards, and the
Ned Deily n...@acm.org writes:
In article
ec96e1390905090735p40bd6c21w5606c521c4c16...@mail.gmail.com,
Benjamin Kaplan benjamin.kap...@case.edu wrote:
On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 4:30 AM, Raoul Gough
bvdmy...@jyxk16274849.net wrote:
[snip]
So did something go wrong with the installer, or is
On 11 mei, 23:07, Rob Williscroft r...@freenet.co.uk wrote:
gert wrote in news:d7591495-4661-4243-ad7e-f142d8244e88
@e24g2000vbe.googlegroups.com in comp.lang.python:
I am trying to do this in a single transaction, the 3 separate
statements work fine, but i am screwed if they are not
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 5:52 PM, pyt...@bdurham.com wrote:
Sam,
In no specific order (I brought them all):
Wesley Chun's Core Python Programming
David Mertz's Text Processing in Python (older, but excellent)
Mark Lutz's Learning Python
All highly recommended.
Best of luck on your
rump...@web.de writes:
I am dissatisfied with Python's (or Java's) Unicode handling:
1) IO overhead to convert UTF-8 (defacto standard on UNIX) into
UTF-16.
So use UTF-8 internally. You can still iterate through strings
efficiently. Random access would take a performance hit. When that's
an
On Mon, 11 May 2009, rump...@web.de wrote:
One question I ask myself upon seeing a new language is if it is possible
to program amb (amb=ambiguous) operator in it. This page gives a very
nice, code first explanation of amb and how it is supposed to work:
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
namekuseijin schrieb:
bav escreveu:
question from a python newbie;
how can i consume in python language, a .NET web service, passing
a string array as parameter in some easy steps?
Unless Microsoft extended the standard in any way, then it should be
just as you
norseman wrote:
div class=moz-text-flowed style=font-family: -moz-fixedhellcats
wrote:
I have Python2.5 installed on Windows XP. Whenever I double click on a
something.pyw file, IDLE launches and opens something.pyw in the
editor. I would prefer to actually *RUN* the program, not edit it. If
In message 57f4c81a-3537-49fa-a5f6-
a0cc0d43d...@o14g2000vbo.googlegroups.com, rump...@web.de wrote:
I am dissatisfied with Python's (or Java's) Unicode handling:
1) IO overhead to convert UTF-8 (defacto standard on UNIX) into
UTF-16.
Are you sure they're using UTF-16? I would use UCS-2 or
In message mailman.5.1242076536.8015.python-l...@python.org, Geoff
Gardiner wrote:
@Lawrence D'Oliveiro:
...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a reason, to keep the spammers away. I'm assuming
this was a momentary lapse of
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