Pyro 4.0
-
I'm extremely pleased to announce the release of Pyro 4.0!
This is the first official release of the new incarnation of Pyro.
What is Pyro?
-
PYthon Remote Objects provides a very easy way of remote communication
between python objects somewhere in a network. It
On 6/12/10 8:26 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
On Jun 12, 6:05 pm, Stephen Hansen me+list/pyt...@ixokai.io wrote:
A programming goof, oversight or unexpected event causes an exception.
It doesn't cause a buffer overflow.
The important thing here isn't so much the exception as
the *traceback*.
On 6/12/10 8:42 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
Stephen Hansen wrote:
Its one thing for Python to make available foot-shooting tools(this is
good! I love ctypes, with care) for the developer, its another thing
entirely for it to shoot at the ground in the normal course of its
operation and hope it
13.6.2010 7:02, Antti Andy Ylikoski kirjoitti:
12.6.2010 22:54, Pascal J. Bourguignon kirjoitti:
bolegagnuist...@gmail.com writes:
[PAIP]
Is there anything in this old norvig book that makes it worth
pursuing as a text ?
Yes.
I agree with his criticism that the book is old, mine stems
On 6/12/10 8:34 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
lkcl wrote:
* in neither gtk nor qt does there exist an auto-layout widget
that's equivalent to putting some span / DOM objects into a div /,
to flow widgets that wrap around.
You essentially seem to be complaining here that pqyqt and
pygtk are
On 6/12/10 8:22 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
Terry Reedy wrote:
Would it be possible to write a program that converts a module that
uses ctypes to interface to a dll to a corresponding C extension
program that would compile to a drop in replacement extension module?
Probably, but I don't see
I call bullshit.
The Python community is vibrant, accessible, and willing to endure far
more then anyone has any right to expect when people come to it for help.
The community seems willing to explain fundamental concepts to newbies
over, and over, and over again; to go out of their way, time
On 6/12/10 10:10 PM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
Python advocacy seems to be by example, not cheerleading.
+1 QOTW
--
Stephen Hansen
... Also: Ixokai
... Mail: me+list/python (AT) ixokai (DOT) io
... Blog: http://meh.ixokai.io/
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
--
lkcl wrote:
* in neither gtk nor qt does there exist an auto-layout widget
that's equivalent to putting some span / DOM objects into a div /,
to flow widgets that wrap around. yes, you can put words into a
Label and get them to flow, but not _widgets_.
I'm pretty sure in PyQt4 that you can
snip all
At first I wanted to response in the style of 'karma is a bitch' or
'what goes around comes around' but then I considered that won't be
helping much, so I only did at first in a meta sort of way, sorry for that.
The thing is that sometimes for no good or appealing reasons, which I
Victor Subervi wrote:
snip
DaveA suggested I not use the same name for my fn. as I do for my var;
however, there is a difference in capitalization, and I'm trying to
standardize this way. It makes it easy to recognize the difference (caps)
and easy to recognize which vars go with which fns.
On Jun 13, 3:34 am, Gregory Ewing greg.ew...@canterbury.ac.nz wrote:
lkcl wrote:
* in neither gtk nor qt does there exist an auto-layout widget
that's equivalent to putting some span / DOM objects into a div /,
to flow widgets that wrap around.
You essentially seem to be complaining here
On Jun 13, 9:01 am, Jeremy Sanders jeremy
+complangpyt...@jeremysanders.net wrote:
lkcl wrote:
* in neither gtk nor qt does there exist an auto-layout widget
that's equivalent to putting some span / DOM objects into a div /,
to flow widgets that wrap around. yes, you can put words into a
You want to contribute to the stdlib? No problem, it's easy! I did so
recently. You file an issue on the python.org bug tracker, describing
the problem, and attach a patch that fixes it. A nice developer with
commit rights will be with you shortly. The guy that committed my tiny
little patch the
Phlip, 06.06.2010 19:12:
Here's xmlrunner.py:
http://www.rittau.org/python/xmlrunner.py
you attach it to your developer tests, and it emits a file called
TEST-unittest.TestSuite.xml, containing auspicious wackiness like
this:
testcase
bfrederi, 03.06.2010 22:44:
I am using lxml iterparse and running into a very obscure error. When
I run iterparse on a file, it will occasionally return an element that
has a element.text == None when the element clearly has text in it.
I assume you are referring to the 'start' event here,
Monte Milanuk wrote:
I realized today that one thing I have never seen covered in any Python
tutorial is how to format and print things to a physical printer. I did
a little bit of searching and didn't come up with much... either I'm
really not using the right search terms, or physical
Hi,
can anyone give me a hint how to mark a built-in module as deprecated?
So mark via warnings... I create a module with Py_InitModule4.
Thanks in advance!!
Bye, moerchendiser2k3
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thomas Jollans tho...@jollans.com writes:
Also, I'm sick of reading a modest proposal in hundreds of subject lines.
OK, how about a modest proposal in the body? Please do not top post. Or
at least don't quote a very, very long article. Thank you.
--
John Bokma
On 06/13/2010 03:54 PM, moerchendiser2k3 wrote:
Hi,
can anyone give me a hint how to mark a built-in module as deprecated?
So mark via warnings... I create a module with Py_InitModule4.
How are modules ever marked as deprecated? I think all there is to it is
issuing a DeprecationWarning...
Monte Milanuk wrote:
Hello,
I'm still a relative newbie to python, so I apologize if this is covered
in detail somewhere and I missed it.
I have a program or two that I want to work on once I get more
proficient with python and sqlite and tkinter/wxpython. One of the big
'features' of
On 6/13/10 4:29 AM, lkcl wrote:
it's in fact how the entire pyjamas UI widget set is created, by
doing nothing more than direct manipulation of bits of DOM and direct
manipulation of the style properties. really really simple.
Did you just call DOM manipulation simple with a straight face? I
On 6/12/10 12:50 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 14:42:27 -0400, Victor Subervi
victorsube...@gmail.com declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
Interestingly,
ls -al
reveals *no* *.pyc files.
Which would seem to indicate that you have no user modules
Monte Milanuk wrote:
Hello,
I'm still a relative newbie to python, so I apologize if this is covered
in detail somewhere and I missed it.
I have a program or two that I want to work on once I get more
proficient with python and sqlite and tkinter/wxpython. One of the big
'features' of
On 06/13/2010 05:29 AM, lkcl wrote:
really? drat. i could have done with knowing that at the time.
hmmm, perhaps i will return to the pyqt4 port after all.
We're now wandering well off-topic here, but then again this thread was
never really on any particular topic.
I have to say I'm really
On Jun 13, 5:04 am, Martin P. Hellwig martin.hell...@dcuktec.org
wrote:
So I would propose that, instead of beating up a dead horse (I try to
write from your point of view) you fork the project, call it Rython (or
whatever you fancy) and create the community you want by patching up the
lkcl schrieb:
[snip]
it's the exact same thing for SVG image file-format. i'm
_definitely_ not convinced that SVG the image fileformat is The One
True Way to design images - but i'm equally definitely convinced of
the power of SVG manipulation libraries which allow for the creation
SVG images
On Jun 13, 1:50 am, Stephen Hansen me+list/pyt...@ixokai.io wrote:
You don't argue a position; you don't support it with facts, logic,
reason. You start immediately into this emotional rhetoric,
pseudo-inspirational nonsense which just comes off as inane. It's like a
bad cross between a
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
No, I think your code is very simple. You can save a few lines by writing
it like this:
s = input('enter two numbers: ')
t = s.split()
print(int(t[0]) + int(t[1])) # no need for temporary variables a and b
Not that we're playing a
On Jun 13, 4:09 am, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
Where is the community?
In Birmingham from 17th to 22nd of July:
http://www.europython.eu/talks/timetable/
(Couldn't resist - one good troll deserves another)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article 83dddac7-7a3a-4dee-9944-ee2f0ec72...@u20g2000pru.googlegroups.com,
alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
Tycho Andersen ty...@tycho.ws wrote:
I think his point may have been that there could be more than one
meaning. My first guess would have been binary decision diagram.
Ah, good point.
On 6/13/10 8:00 AM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
Why not go the other direction. Use python to do your processing, and
send the results to excel. There are python modules that read and write
excel files.
Well... partly because Excel is not exactly cross-platform. Granted,
the mass majority of
In article hun8s4$h4...@news.albasani.net, WH whz...@gmail.com wrote:
'x' in getattr() should be a reference to the __main__ module, right?
How to get it?
Just for the record, the best way to get a reference to __main__ is to
import it:
import __main__
--
Aahz (a...@pythoncraft.com)
In article 0912f443-e83a-4436-80db-b1cb915d5...@r27g2000yqb.googlegroups.com,
Zeth theol...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jun 13, 4:09=A0am, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
Where is the community?
In Birmingham from 17th to 22nd of July:
http://www.europython.eu/talks/timetable/
(Couldn't
On 04:25 pm, wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
No, I think your code is very simple. You can save a few lines by
writing
it like this:
s = input('enter two numbers: ')
t = s.split()
print(int(t[0]) + int(t[1])) # no need for temporary
In article mailman.1348.1276386991.32709.python-l...@python.org,
geremy condra debat...@gmail.com wrote:
Bug filed, http://bugs.python.org/issue8986.
Please don't put extraneous punctuation on URLs. That period is a valid
URL character, but it's invalid for this URL, and it's not obvious to
On 6/12/2010 11:42 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
Seriously, though, if you can't trust someone to write safe
ctypes-using code, can you trust them to write safe C code any
better?
No, and I think you are missing the concern about ctypes. There are two
issues of ctypes versus safety/security:
In article cf08e777-b98b-4b7c-96df-e7b127c02...@y4g2000yqy.googlegroups.com,
lkcl luke.leigh...@gmail.com wrote:
i'm recording all of these, and any other web browser manipulation
technology that i've ever encountered, here:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/WebBrowserProgramming
Neat! Why aren't
On Jun 13, 3:52 pm, Arndt Roger Schneider arndt.ro...@addcom.de
wrote:
lkcl schrieb:
[snip]
it's the exact same thing for SVG image file-format. i'm
_definitely_ not convinced that SVG the image fileformat is The One
True Way to design images - but i'm equally definitely convinced of
On 6/13/2010 7:40 AM, Thomas Jollans wrote:
You want to contribute to the stdlib? No problem, it's easy! I did so
recently. You file an issue on the python.org bug tracker, describing
the problem, and attach a patch that fixes it. A nice developer with
commit rights will be with you shortly.
Hi,
I'm writing some buffer-centric number-crunching routines in C for
Python code that uses array.array objects for storing/manipulating data.
I would like to:
1. allocate a buffer of a certain size
2. fill it
3. return it as an array.
I can't see any obvious way to do this with the array
On 6/13/10 9:14 AM, rantingrick wrote:
On Jun 13, 1:50 am, Stephen Hansen me+list/pyt...@ixokai.io wrote:
You don't argue a position; you don't support it with facts, logic,
reason. You start immediately into this emotional rhetoric,
pseudo-inspirational nonsense which just comes off as
On 6/13/2010 7:20 AM, lkcl wrote:
I'm far from convinced that HTML and CSS are the One True Way
to design GUIs these days,
if you have HTML the fileformat and CSS the fileformat in mind
when saying that, i can tell you right now that they're not.
fortunately, with the W3C DOM functions
On 6/13/10 8:42 AM, rantingrick wrote:
However, if the ivory towers continue to pretend that the rest
of the Python community does not exist well then they will force my
hand, and i will start a fork. Then we will have a sort of ironic
situation... the very people who rail *against* me (and
On 6/13/10 10:15 AM, Thomas Jollans wrote:
Hi,
I'm writing some buffer-centric number-crunching routines in C for
Python code that uses array.array objects for storing/manipulating data.
I would like to:
Take this with a grain of salt: I am *not* a C programmer, and my usage
of the
Monte Milanuk memila...@gmail.com wrote:
On 6/13/10 8:00 AM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
Why not go the other direction. Use python to do your processing,
and
send the results to excel. There are python modules that read and
write
excel files.
Well... partly because Excel is not exactly
On 6/13/2010 12:14 PM, rantingrick wrote:
I have documented time and again the poor state of IDLE. The only
responses i ever get are...
Nobody uses IDLE
Only a dumbass would use IDLE
I have never used IDLE but i *know* nothing is wrong with it
Perhaps you are listening selectively. I
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 08:42:57 -0700, rantingrick wrote:
i will start a fork.
That is the most sensible thing you have said yet. Please do so, it will
be a great thing for the Python community.
--
Steven
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Here's the thing. Python has one of the nicest communities of most
software projects (except maybe ubuntu), try Perl or C. Unless you
completely know what you're talking about, have spent atleast 1/2 an
hour researching your problem, those guys will refrain from helping.
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at
On 6/13/10 10:23 AM, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
However, the overall problem here is that printer APIs are very
different between os and they aren't abstracted in python to some common
module. They need access to GUI libraries which python doesn't expose
out of the box.
I know the usual response
Monte Milanuk memila...@gmail.com writes:
Hello,
I'm still a relative newbie to python, so I apologize if this is
covered in detail somewhere and I missed it.
I have a program or two that I want to work on once I get more
proficient with python and sqlite and tkinter/wxpython. One of the
Does anyone know how to handle TIFF images in Python?
The pylab support uses PIL, and using either pylab or PIL directly,
it messes up the colour scheme. It may look as if it loads CMY believing
that it is RGB, but I am not absolutely sure.
I have no problem handling Microsoft BMP colour images
On 12/06/2010 14:44, lkcl wrote:
On Jun 6, 10:49 pm, Kevin Walzerk...@codebykevin.com wrote:
- Pythonic
- The default GUI (so it replaces Tkinter)
- It has the support of the majority of the Python community
- Simple and obvious to use for simple things
- Comprehensive, for complicated things
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 1:57 PM, Steven D'Aprano
st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 08:42:57 -0700, rantingrick wrote:
i will start a fork.
That is the most sensible thing you have said yet. Please do so, it will
be a great thing for the Python community.
Monte Milanuk wrote:
Hello,
I'm still a relative newbie to python, so I apologize if this is covered
in detail somewhere and I missed it.
I have a program or two that I want to work on once I get more
proficient with python and sqlite and tkinter/wxpython. One of the big
'features' of
On 6/13/10 11:12 AM, Anssi Saari wrote:
I actually looked into label printers recently. It seems that at least
the cheaper models from Brother and Dymo accept a bitmap in specific
dimensions and they print it pixel exactly. Very simple, in other
words. But different printers need different
Thomas Jollans, 13.06.2010 19:15:
I'm writing some buffer-centric number-crunching routines in C for
Python code that uses array.array objects for storing/manipulating data.
I would like to:
1. allocate a buffer of a certain size
2. fill it
3. return it as an array.
Take a look at a) NumPy
On 6/13/10 11:41 AM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
Take a look at a) NumPy and b) Cython. You can also use Cython with the
array module, but NumPy is a much more common way to deal with number
crunching routines, especially multi-dimentional arrays.
Does Cython support Py3k yet? The OP seemed to be
On 13/06/2010 18:24, Stephen Hansen wrote:
On 6/13/10 8:42 AM, rantingrick wrote:
[big snip]
Stephen, you've tried as have others with this troll, but you're wasting
your time. As I said a day or two back by paraphrasing Tommy Docherty,
Ranting Rick is to Python what King Herod was to baby
Stephen Hansen, 13.06.2010 21:05:
On 6/13/10 11:41 AM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
Take a look at a) NumPy and b) Cython. You can also use Cython with the
array module, but NumPy is a much more common way to deal with number
crunching routines, especially multi-dimentional arrays.
Does Cython
On 6/13/10 11:30 AM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
Use django or another web framework, and make your application a web
app. With this approach you can display output to a web page, and
create a print stylesheet that can be finely tuned to print.
This ups your work to get involved with a web
On Jun 13, 1:13 pm, Monte Milanuk memila...@gmail.com wrote:
On 6/13/10 10:23 AM, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
However, the overall problem here is that printer APIs are very
different between os and they aren't abstracted in python to some common
module. They need access to GUI libraries which
On 6/13/10 12:08 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote:
On 13/06/2010 18:24, Stephen Hansen wrote:
On 6/13/10 8:42 AM, rantingrick wrote:
[big snip]
Stephen, you've tried as have others with this troll, but you're wasting
your time.
Realistically, I know. However, http://xkcd.com/386/ currently has a
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 12:25 PM, Monte Milanuk memila...@gmail.com wrote:
On 6/13/10 11:30 AM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
Use django or another web framework, and make your application a web
app. With this approach you can display output to a web page, and
create a print stylesheet that can be
On Jun 13, 12:56 am, geremy condra debat...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 4:40 PM, Robert Kern robert.k...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2010-06-12 17:49 , geremy condra wrote:
In Python3.2, calling math.erfc with a value in [-27.2, -30) raises
an OverflowError: math range error. This is
* Steven D'Aprano, on 13.06.2010 19:57:
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 08:42:57 -0700, rantingrick wrote:
i will start a fork.
That is the most sensible thing you have said yet. Please do so, it will
be a great thing for the Python community.
Not nice to quote out of context, there was an if and a
On 2010-06-13 14:17 , Stefan Behnel wrote:
Stephen Hansen, 13.06.2010 21:05:
On 6/13/10 11:41 AM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
Take a look at a) NumPy and b) Cython. You can also use Cython with the
array module, but NumPy is a much more common way to deal with number
crunching routines, especially
I am looking for Python OpenSSL library, for Python version 2.5.4 (on
Windows)
Which does not require to install Cygwin package. Need just to decrypt file,
then uninstall library.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 13, 6:15 pm, Thomas Jollans tho...@jollans.com wrote:
Hi,
I'm writing some buffer-centric number-crunching routines in C for
Python code that uses array.array objects for storing/manipulating data.
I would like to:
1. allocate a buffer of a certain size
2. fill it
3. return it as
I know Python is growing in popularity and some of Palms devices
already let you run Python apps in a VM environment. I'm wondering if
anyone knows (or can make an educated guess) if there are any plans
for Python to come to the Android environment? I'm not talking
backend stuff here but full
On Jun 13, 5:46 pm, exar...@twistedmatrix.com wrote:
On 04:25 pm, wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
No, I think your code is very simple. You can save a few lines by
writing
it like this:
s = input('enter two numbers: ')
t = s.split()
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 4:29 PM, astral
ast...@news.eternal-september.org wrote:
I am looking for Python OpenSSL library, for Python version 2.5.4 (on
Windows)
Which does not require to install Cygwin package. Need just to decrypt file,
then uninstall library.
You might want to take a look at
On Jun 12, 9:02 pm, Antti \Andy\ Ylikoski
antti.yliko...@gmail.com wrote:
12.6.2010 22:54, Pascal J. Bourguignon kirjoitti:
bolegagnuist...@gmail.com writes:
[PAIP]
Is there anything in this old norvig book that makes it worth
pursuing as a text ?
Yes.
I agree with his criticism
Why was the reaction so negative? Well i will admit some fault in the
fact that i trashed Ruby pretty bad. I felt everything i said was true
IMO then as is now (mostly). People should have a right to opinions.
However since i was such an unknown and you could say a newbie,
was this reaction
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 1:39 PM, Anthony Papillion papill...@gmail.com wrote:
I know Python is growing in popularity and some of Palms devices
already let you run Python apps in a VM environment. I'm wondering if
anyone knows (or can make an educated guess) if there are any plans
for Python
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 1:29 PM, astral
ast...@news.eternal-september.org wrote:
I am looking for Python OpenSSL library, for Python version 2.5.4 (on
Windows)
Which does not require to install Cygwin package. Need just to decrypt file,
then uninstall library.
Evpy[1] is designed to be a very
On 13 June 2010 21:39, Anthony Papillion papill...@gmail.com wrote:
I know Python is growing in popularity and some of Palms devices
already let you run Python apps in a VM environment. I'm wondering if
anyone knows (or can make an educated guess) if there are any plans
for Python to come to
Michael Crute mcr...@gmail.com wrote in message
news:mailman.1395.1276462801.32709.python-l...@python.org...
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 4:29 PM, astral
ast...@news.eternal-september.org wrote:
I am looking for Python OpenSSL library, for Python version 2.5.4 (on
Windows)
Which does not
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 5:59 PM, astral
ast...@news.eternal-september.org wrote:
You might want to take a look at m2crypto[0]. While I have not
personally run it on Windows (runs great on OS X and Linux) they do
provide pre-compiled Windows binaries.
which one is for windows, for Python
On 6/13/10 2:59 PM, astral wrote:
which one is for windows, for Python version 2.5.4 ? And how to uninstall
when required?
You can try http://www.egenix.com/products/python/pyOpenSSL/ -- its
fairly low-level OpenSSL, but its pretty comprehensive.
And you uninstall it in Add Remove
Stephen Hansen wrote:
On 6/12/10 12:50 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 14:42:27 -0400, Victor Subervi
victorsube...@gmail.com declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
Interestingly,
ls -al
reveals *no* *.pyc files.
Which would seem to indicate that
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 1:20 PM, Robert Kern robert.k...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2010-06-13 14:17 , Stefan Behnel wrote:
Stephen Hansen, 13.06.2010 21:05:
On 6/13/10 11:41 AM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
Take a look at a) NumPy and b) Cython. You can also use Cython with the
array module, but NumPy
On 6/13/10 3:19 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
I thought python (well, cpython, at least) didn't use .pyc files for the
main script?
You're right, it doesn't. I forgot about that interaction with CGI*.
--
Stephen Hansen
... Also: Ixokai
... Mail: me+list/python (AT) ixokai (DOT) io
...
Thank you gentleman for your input. I'm starting to look at Python/GTK
for desktop development and was hoping there might also be something
for Android. Oh well, like Simon said (pardon the pun), it is open
source so... :-)
Anthony
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I am trying to compare LISP/Scheme/Python for their expressiveness.
For this, I propose a vanilla C interpreter. I have seen a book which
writes C interpreter in C.
The criteria would be the small size and high readability of the code.
Are there already answers anywhere ?
How would a gury
I just installed 2.6 and 3.1 from current maintenance source on Mac
OSx. When I am running as an interactive terminal session the up arrow
does not scroll thought the history of the py commands I have entered
I just get ^[[A. When I install from a compiled source it works fine.
Whats the fix for
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 4:07 PM, bolega gnuist...@gmail.com wrote:
I am trying to compare LISP/Scheme/Python for their expressiveness.
Try the programming languages shootout.
For this, I propose a vanilla C interpreter. I have seen a book which
writes C interpreter in C.
Good luck.
The
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 5:28 PM, Gerry Reno gr...@verizon.net wrote:
sounds like your keymapping got messed with.
you could just:
set -o vi
python
ESC, Ctrl-j
and now ESC-k and ESC-j will take you back and forth in history (std vi
editing)
This is done within python? Let make sure I am
These command just allow you to use 'vi editing mode' within python. If you've ever navigated a file with vi to go up and down the document you'll immediately know how it works.-GerryJun 13, 2010 07:39:35 PM, vinc...@vincentdavis.net wrote:On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 5:28 PM, Gerry Reno
On 2010-06-13 16:07:54 -0700, bolega gnuist...@gmail.com said:
I am trying to compare LISP/Scheme/Python for their expressiveness.
For this, I propose a vanilla C interpreter. I have seen a book which
writes C interpreter in C.
The criteria would be the small size and high readability of the
Someone Something fordhai...@gmail.com writes:
Here's the thing. Python has one of the nicest communities of most
software projects (except maybe ubuntu), try Perl or C. Unless you
completely know what you're talking about, have spent atleast 1/2 an
hour researching your problem, those guys
On Jun 13, 4:39 pm, Vincent Davis vinc...@vincentdavis.net wrote:
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 5:28 PM, Gerry Reno gr...@verizon.net wrote:
sounds like your keymapping got messed with.
you could just:
set -o vi
python
ESC, Ctrl-j
and now ESC-k and ESC-j will take you back and forth in
On 14-6-2010 1:19, Vincent Davis wrote:
I just installed 2.6 and 3.1 from current maintenance source on Mac
OSx. When I am running as an interactive terminal session the up arrow
does not scroll thought the history of the py commands I have entered
I just get ^[[A. When I install from a compiled
sounds like your keymapping got messed with.you could just:set -o vipythonESC, Ctrl-jand now ESC-k and ESC-j will take you back and forth in history (std vi editing)-GerryJun 13, 2010 07:22:40 PM, vinc...@vincentdavis.net wrote:I just installed 2.6 and 3.1 from current maintenance source on
PyErr_WarnEx(PyExc_DeprecationWarning, foo deprecated. use fuzz,
1);
But where can I write this? With Py_InitModule4 I can just
pass a list of functions but no real execution part which
is executed when a module is imported.
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On Jun 13, 7:07 pm, bolega gnuist...@gmail.com wrote:
I am trying to compare LISP/Scheme/Python for their expressiveness.
For this, I propose a vanilla C interpreter. I have seen a book which
writes C interpreter in C.
The criteria would be the small size and high readability of the code.
On 13 Jun 2010 09:49:03 -0700
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
Bug filed, http://bugs.python.org/issue8986.
Please don't put extraneous punctuation on URLs. That period is a valid
URL character, but it's invalid for this URL, and it's not obvious to the
reader whether the period should be
In article mailman.1409.1276477866.32709.python-l...@python.org,
D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net wrote:
On 13 Jun 2010 09:49:03 -0700
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
Please don't put extraneous punctuation on URLs. That period is a valid
URL character, but it's invalid for this URL, and
I've got five pages of information linked to from here:
http://www.subspacefield.org/~travis/
LWMLs
template systems
static web page generators
microframeworks
web app frameworks
It seems like many web app programmers and web authors know one
system, or possibly two, and so you don't often get
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 22:14:34 +0200, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
* Steven D'Aprano, on 13.06.2010 19:57:
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 08:42:57 -0700, rantingrick wrote:
i will start a fork.
That is the most sensible thing you have said yet. Please do so, it
will be a great thing for the Python
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