Hi all,
I'm glad to announce you Nanpy 0.9 release!
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/nanpy/0.9
The main purpose of Nanpy is making programmers' life easier, giving them
something to create prototypes faster and use Arduino in a simpler way,
thanks to a simple and powerful language like Python. Also
Dear people,
I would like to announce new release of the Portable Python based on Python
2.7.6
Included in this release:
-
* PyScripter v2.5.3
* PyCharm Community Edition 3.1.2 (Thanks to cebik)
* NymPy 1.8.1
* SciPy 0.13.3
* Matplotlib 1.3.1
* PyWin32 218
* Django 1.6.2
Hi there,
Pylint 1.2 has been uploaded to pypi by the end of the last week! More info on
this heavy release on http://www.logilab.org/blogentry/240019.
As usual, feedback and comments welcome.
Enjoy!
--
Sylvain Thénault, LOGILAB, Paris (01.45.32.03.12) - Toulouse (05.62.17.16.42)
Formations
Pavel Volkov sai...@lists.xtsubasa.org writes:
The attribute list is different now and there's no __dict__ and the
object does not accept new attributes.
Please explain what's going on.
It's a leaky abstraction, unfortunately.
By default, all user-defined types will provide their instances
On 23Apr2014 09:39, Pavel Volkov sai...@lists.xtsubasa.org wrote:
There are some basics about Python objects I don't understand.
Consider this snippet:
class X: pass
...
x = X()
dir(x)
['__class__', '__delattr__', '__dict__', '__dir__', '__doc__',
'__eq__', '__format__', '__ge__',
On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 10:52 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote:
There's not just the keyboard mapping. There's the mental cost of knowing
which keyboard mapping you need (is it Greek, Hebrew, or maths
symbols?), the cost of remembering the mapping from the keys you see on
the
Devin Jeanpierre jeanpierr...@gmail.com writes:
But yes, typing out the special characters is annoying. I just use
words.
I use words that describe the meaning, where feasible.
The only downside to using words is, how do you specify capital
versus lowercase letters?
Why do you need to, for
On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 11:22:33 AM UTC+5:30, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
25 Unicode characters down, 1114000+ to go :-)
The question would arise if there was some suggestion to add
1114000(+) characters to the syntactic/lexical definition of python.
IOW while its true that unicode is a
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 4:57 PM, Rustom Mody rustompm...@gmail.com wrote:
In such a (default) setup typing a ∧ or ∨ is not possible at all without
something like a char-picker and at best has an ergonomic cost that is an
order of magnitude higher than the 'naturally available' characters.
On
On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 23:57:46 -0700, Rustom Mody wrote:
perhaps the following is the most preferred?
COMPUTE YEAR MODULO 4 EQUALS 0 AND YEAR MODULO 100 NOT EQUAL TO ZERO OR
YEAR MODULO 100 EQUAL to 0
IOW COBOL is desirable?
If the only choices are COBOL on one hand and the mutant
Hello everyone,
I am trying hard to write a list to a file as follows:
def average_ELECT(pwd):
os.chdir(pwd)
files = filter(os.path.isfile, os.listdir('./'))
folders = filter(os.path.isdir, os.listdir('./'))
eelec = 0.0; evdw = 0.0; EELEC = []; elecutoff = [];
g =
On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 23:57:46 -0700, Rustom Mody wrote:
On the other hand when/if a keyboard mapping is defined in which the
characters that are commonly needed are available, it is reasonable to
expect the ∨,∧ to cost no more than 2 strokes each (ie about as much as
an 'A'; slightly more than
2014-04-23 9:53 GMT+02:00 Dhananjay dhananjay.c.jo...@gmail.com:
Hello everyone,
I am trying hard to write a list to a file as follows:
def average_ELECT(pwd):
os.chdir(pwd)
files = filter(os.path.isfile, os.listdir('./'))
folders = filter(os.path.isdir, os.listdir('./'))
Pavel Volkov sai...@lists.xtsubasa.org wrote:
There are some basics about Python objects I don't understand.
Consider this snippet:
class X: pass
...
x = X()
dir(x)
['__class__', '__delattr__', '__dict__', '__dir__', '__doc__',
'__eq__', '__format__', '__ge__', '__getattribute__',
2014-04-23 8:11 GMT+02:00 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
On 23Apr2014 09:39, Pavel Volkov sai...@lists.xtsubasa.org wrote:
There are some basics about Python objects I don't understand.
Consider this snippet:
class X: pass
...
x = X()
dir(x)
['__class__', '__delattr__',
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 03:48:32PM +0200, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 8:11 GMT+02:00 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
Look up the __slots__ dunder var in the Python doco index:
https://docs.python.org/3/glossary.html#term-slots
You'll see it as a (rarely used, mostly
2014-04-23 15:59 GMT+02:00 Phil Connell pconn...@gmail.com:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 03:48:32PM +0200, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 8:11 GMT+02:00 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
Look up the __slots__ dunder var in the Python doco index:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 04:21:26PM +0200, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 15:59 GMT+02:00 Phil Connell pconn...@gmail.com:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 03:48:32PM +0200, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 8:11 GMT+02:00 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
Look up the __slots__ dunder
On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 1:23:00 PM UTC+5:30, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Tue, 22 Apr 2014 23:57:46 -0700, Rustom Mody wrote:
On the other hand when/if a keyboard mapping is defined in which the
characters that are commonly needed are available, it is reasonable to
expect the ∨,∧ to cost
Hi,
I have a GUI app that is written using wx. When I run it on CentOS 6.5, the
following error messages are displayed and the app closes:
(python:10096): Pango-WARNING **: shaping failure, expect ugly output.
shape-engine='BasicEngineFc', font='DejaVu Sans 10.9990234375', text=''
On 4/23/14 1:08 PM, Reginaldo wrote:
I have a GUI app that is written using wx. When I run it on CentOS 6.5, the
following error messages are displayed and the app closes:
Only fails on CentOS ?
I use an idle thread in my application.
Is your CentOS launching idle with -n switch ?
On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 10:21:26 PM UTC+8, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 15:59 GMT+02:00 Phil Connell pcon...@gmail.com:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 03:48:32PM +0200, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
2014-04-23 8:11 GMT+02:00 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
Look up the
Hello,
I am currently writting a program called subuser(subuser.org), which is written
as classically imperative code. Subuser is, essentially, a package manager.
It installs and updates programs from repositories.
I have a set of source files
On 23/04/2014 21:57, tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I am currently writting a program called subuser(subuser.org), which is written
as classically imperative code. Subuser is, essentially, a package manager.
It installs and updates programs from repositories.
I have a set of source
On Apr 23, 2014 5:01 PM, tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
I asked on IRC and it was sugested that I use multiple classes, however I
see no logical way to separate a SubuserProgram object into multiple
classes.
You say you already have the methods logically separated into files. How
about adding one
On 04/23/2014 01:57 PM, tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
There is one problem though. Currently, I have these functions logically
organized into source files, each between 40 and 170 LOC. I fear that if
I were to put all of these functions into one class, than I would have a
single, very large
On 2014-04-23 21:57, tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I am currently writting a program called subuser(subuser.org), which
is written as classically imperative code. Subuser is, essentially,
a package manager. It installs and updates programs from
repositories.
I have a set of source
On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 7:42 AM, Ethan Furman et...@stoneleaf.us wrote:
On 04/23/2014 01:57 PM, tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
There is one problem though. Currently, I have these functions logically
organized into source files, each between 40 and 170 LOC. I fear that if
I were to put all
On 4/23/2014 3:53 AM, Dhananjay wrote:
Hello everyone,
I am trying hard to write a list to a file as follows:
def average_ELECT(pwd):
os.chdir(pwd)
I would 'print pwd' to make sure where files are being opened.
files = filter(os.path.isfile, os.listdir('./'))
folders =
On 4/23/2014 7:23 AM, length power wrote:
please download the attachment
Cinfo.zip. Please do not post with attachments. This is a text list, and
binary attachments can be a vehicle for malware. Instead, reduce your
code to the minimum necessary to exhibit the problem and include it in
the
On 4/23/2014 3:46 PM, Mark H Harris wrote:
On 4/23/14 1:08 PM, Reginaldo wrote:
I have a GUI app that is written using wx. When I run it on CentOS
6.5, the following error messages are displayed and the app closes:
Only fails on CentOS ?
I use an idle thread in my application.
tim.thel...@gmail.com wrote:
I think this would be better solved
by moving fully to an OOP model. That is, I would have a SubuserProgram
class which had methods such as install, describe, isInstalled...
This wouldn't necessarily be better. Don't be taken in by the
everything is better as a
Ian Kelly wrote:
How
about adding one abstract class per file, and then letting
SubuserProgram inherit from each of those individual classes?
I'd recommend against that kind of thing, because it makes
the code hard to follow. With module-level functions, you can
tell where any given function
Is there a way to get the original source?
I am trying to retrieve the main script from a py2exe'd old program.
The programmer neglected to commit to SVN before leaving.
Using Easy Python Decompiler I am able to get the source for the imported
modules.
Using Resources Viewer from PlexData and
在 2014年4月24日星期四UTC+8上午2时08分29秒,Reginaldo写道:
Hi,
I have a GUI app that is written using wx. When I run it on CentOS 6.5, the
following error messages are displayed and the app closes:
(python:10096): Pango-WARNING **: shaping failure, expect ugly output.
Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu Wrote in message:
On 4/23/2014 3:53 AM, Dhananjay wrote:
Hello everyone,
I am trying hard to write a list to a file as follows:
def average_ELECT(pwd):
os.chdir(pwd)
I would 'print pwd' to make sure where files are being opened.
files =
tim.thel...@gmail.com Wrote in message:
I don't really understand your problem or your examples, but
others apparently do. So I'll just make a few comments.
There is one problem though. Currently, I have these functions logically
organized into source files, each between 40 and 170
Justin Ezequiel wrote:
Using Easy Python Decompiler I am able to get the source for the imported
modules. Using Resources Viewer from PlexData and some code I am able to
retrieve the code object. I am however stumped as to how to retrieve the
source from this code object.
Easy Python
Changes by Chris Rebert pyb...@rebertia.com:
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--
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___
___
Changes by Gregory P. Smith g...@krypto.org:
Added file:
http://bugs.python.org/file35007/issue21291-patch-with-test-gps01.diff
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___
Sworddragon added the comment:
The documentation says that unicode_internal is deprecated since Python 3.3 but
not unicode_escape. Also, isn't unicode_escape different from utf-8? For
example my original intention was to convert 2 byte string characters to their
control characters. For
Charles-François Natali added the comment:
Updated patch using an anonymous struct.
LGTM!
--
___
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___
Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset 5d745d97b7da by Gregory P. Smith in branch '3.4':
subprocess's Popen.wait() is now thread safe so that multiple threads
http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/5d745d97b7da
New changeset df45d0336dad by Gregory P. Smith in branch 'default':
subprocess's
Charles-François Natali added the comment:
1) I really don't like the use_fallback argument: as a user, I don't
care if it's using sendfile/splice/whatever WIndows uses.
I view this as a channel transfer (like Java's
Gregory P. Smith added the comment:
This fix is also present in subprocess32 3.2.6 on PyPI for use on Python 2.
--
resolution: - fixed
stage: - commit review
status: open - closed
type: - behavior
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
New submission from randomcoder1:
Sinntp is a nntp client. It uses nntplib from Python as a nntp library to fetch
messages from NNTP servers.
I've tested this on two environments with the following package versions:
1) Ubuntu 12.04.4 , python-support 1.0.14ubuntu2, Python 2.7.3-0ubuntu2.2 ,
randomcoder1 added the comment:
I'm cross-referencing this here too.
https://code.google.com/p/sinntp/issues/detail?id=9
--
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___
randomcoder1 added the comment:
I forgot to mention that in the environment 1) described above, everything
worked fine.
--
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___
Jakub Wilk added the comment:
For the reference, the exception is:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File /home/user/sources/sinntp/sinntp, line 357, in module
connection.quit()
File /usr/lib/python2.7/nntplib.py, line 608, in quit
resp = self.shortcmd('QUIT')
File
Thorsten Weimann added the comment:
Please re-open. The IO system only takes care of line separators, if no
encoding is given.
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Martin Kolman added the comment:
@ 1.: Reproducer attached to the comment - just build the C code and run
trace_test.py It is maybe not as minimal as it could be but I'm afraid the
context of what the module is doing would be lost if it was cut down too
aggressively.
@ 2.: I'm afraid this is
Changes by Jakub Wilk jw...@jwilk.net:
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Mark Kubacki added the comment:
The cipher strings rely too much on AES for my taste. Imagine that
ChaCha20Poly1305 or any other strong cipher suite is introduced to OpenSSL in
the future.
Enabling using general, and demoting using narrow terms, seems IMHO a better
approach. For example:
Donald Stufft added the comment:
The cipher string includes HIGH, so if ChaCha20Poly1305 or another cipher suite
is added to OpenSSL it'll get included in the cipher string by default.
So the major difference of what you suggest would be no longer prioritizing
ciphers. However I would argue
Changes by Berker Peksag berker.pek...@gmail.com:
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___
Antoine Pitrou added the comment:
For any device that has hardware support for AES (AES-NI) AES-GCM is
hands down a better choice of cipher. It is secure, has no issues in
the spec itself, and it is *fast*, like 900MB/s for AES-128-GCM on a
Sandy Bridge Xeon w/ AES-NI (ChaCha20Poly1305 got
Donald Stufft added the comment:
I think performance isn't really relevant, except perhaps on very busy
servers. A smartphone acting as a *client* certainly shouldn't need to
download 20 MB/s of encrypted data.
Well, if you factor out performance then ChaCha20Poly1305 and AES-GCM are more
or
Mark Kubacki added the comment:
Thanks for the detailed insight, Donald! And I certainly love the progress
these changes here bring. :-)
Perhaps limiting the scope to ChaCha20Poly1305 (»CCP«) has been a wrong
approach of mine to explain my concerns:
We should not refer to any particular
randomcoder1 added the comment:
@Jakub Sure, I've submitted a patch in the sinntp googlecode issue tracker.
When you have some time, please have a look at it.
--
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Alex Gaynor added the comment:
It would be great if we could rely on OpenSSL's ordering. It would be seriously
fantastic. OpenSSL is best positioned to be able to do the right things, it's
updated at the right times. It should be where we do this.
Unfortunately the OpenSSL maintainers have
Changes by randomcoder1 randomcod...@gmail.com:
--
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status: open - closed
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___
New submission from Brett Cannon:
When importlib.__init__ tries to mask the fact that _frozen_importlib is frozen
it should also reset __loader__ to be an instance of SourceFileLoader. This
will allow tracebacks to include source lines thanks to
SourceFileLoader.get_source().
--
Changes by Zachary Ware zachary.w...@gmail.com:
--
title: Update importlib.__init__ to reset _frozen_imnportlib's loader to
SourceFileLoader - Update importlib.__init__ to reset _frozen_importlib's
loader to SourceFileLoader
___
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Vinay Sajip added the comment:
Please re-open.
This is configurable in Python 3.2 and later using the terminator attribute,
but this can't be added to 2.7 as it would constitute a new feature.
--
___
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ddve...@ucar.edu added the comment:
Well, ok, thanks :-)
But I'm still wondering if it's not possible to use mocks for this test.
or at least example.com (as in issue #20939) which is supposed to be
more stable than python.org
--
___
Python
Zachary Ware added the comment:
Having looked at this again, the current patch is just far bigger than it needs
to be and tries to do too much, not to mention being rather out of date now.
So, here's a much less ambitious, much simpler patch with many fewer ways it
can go wrong (but also not
New submission from Ben Ma:
import ntpath
ntpath.splitdrive(None)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in module
File E:\python3\lib\ntpath.py, line 159, in splitdrive
if p and len(p) 1:
TypeError: object of type 'NoneType' has no len()
Solution: (that I've found)
Eric V. Smith added the comment:
Why are you passing None, and what would you expect the result to be?
The function is documented as taking a string.
--
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type: crash - behavior
___
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Ezio Melotti added the comment:
One of the Mercurial devs convinced me to pursue what I had initially proposed
in msg197645 and write a merge script (attached).
The script is still a proof of concept, it makes a few assumptions and doesn't
handle all the cases, but I did a few tests and it
Giampaolo Rodola' added the comment:
1) I really don't like the use_fallback argument
Apart from complicating the prototype, what do this bring?
My initial thought was that the user might want to know *why* a file cannot be
sent by using the fastest method and hence wants to see the original
Giampaolo Rodola' added the comment:
Note: my example about limiting the transfer speed does not really apply 'cause
as this stands right now it cannot be used with non-blocking sockets. Other
arguments do though and I hope it's clear that we need blocksize.
--
akira added the comment:
I really don't like the use_fallback argument ..
I initially also thought so. But I've suggested the parameter to replace
`(was_os_sendfile_used, os_sendfile_error)` returned value as a *trade off*
between a slight complexity in the interface vs. allowing to detect
Changes by Justin Myers jus...@justinmyers.net:
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Zachary Ware added the comment:
This is fixed in 3.5, PCbuild/tix.vcxproj builds Tix in Debug and Release modes.
--
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resolution: - fixed
stage: needs patch - resolved
status: open - closed
versions: +Python 3.5 -Python 3.2
___
Python
Zachary Ware added the comment:
PCbuild/tix.vcxproj explicitly sets TCL_DIR and TK_DIR in the command line used
to build Tix, using the paths used by the rest of the solution and the
Tools/buildbot scripts; would the attached patch now be acceptable (for 3.5
only)?
--
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Martin v. Löwis added the comment:
For 3.5, it's fine.
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ddve...@ucar.edu added the comment:
Ok, let me dig into it and see if I can figure it out
On 04/20/2014 05:10 PM, Ezio Melotti wrote:
Ezio Melotti added the comment:
Do you want to propose a patch?
--
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nosy: +ezio.melotti
type: - behavior
Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset 4ff37fbcd4e8 by Zachary Ware in branch 'default':
Issue #9765: Adjust where Tools/msi/msi.py looks for Tcl/Tk license terms.
http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/4ff37fbcd4e8
--
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___
Python
Zachary Ware added the comment:
Done, thanks!
--
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resolution: - fixed
stage: commit review - resolved
status: open - closed
___
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New submission from Zachary Ware:
We should have some tests for Tix, which currently has none. The Windows
buildbots will be able to run the tests, but Tix is not guaranteed to be
available elsewhere.
--
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keywords: easy
messages: 217089
nosy: zach.ware
Giampaolo Rodola' added the comment:
Considering the current indecision about certain design aspects I started a
discussion on python-ideas:
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-April/027752.html
--
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Changes by Yury Selivanov yselivanov...@gmail.com:
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___
Jim Jewett added the comment:
_check_closed sounds like you expect it to be closed, and might even assert
that it is closed, except that you want the check run even in release mode
and/or it might fail. Since being closed is actually the unexpectedly broken
state, I would prefer that you
Derek Wilson added the comment:
It is worth noting that the do exist some domains that have been registered in
the past that work with IDNA2003 but not IDNA2008.
There definitely needs to be IDNA2008 support, for my use case I need to
attempt IDNA2008 and then fall back to IDNA2003.
When
Claudiu.Popa added the comment:
gzip uses the same name, _check_closed, but your suggestion sounds good. I'll
update the patch.
--
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R. David Murray added the comment:
Using unicode_escape to decode non-ascii is simply wrong. It can't work.
--
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___
R. David Murray added the comment:
To understand why, understand that a byte string has no encoding inherent. So
when you call b'utf8string'.decode('unicode_escape'), python has no way to know
how to interpret the non-ascii characters in that bytestring. If you want the
unicode_escape
R. David Murray added the comment:
Also, I'm not sure what this should do, but what it does do doesn't look right:
codecs.decode('ä', 'unicode-escape')
'ä'
--
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Jim Jewett added the comment:
I think the requested timing regression was for the non-broken case. When the
database has NOT been closed, and keys() still works, will it be way slower
than before?
Note that I am not asking you to do that test (though the eventual committer
might); the
Jesús Cea Avión added the comment:
First, Python 2.4 has been out of support for a really long time. Deleting.
Eric, let me clarify the situation, because this report is old and I forgot the
details.
I think current situation is this, when doing something like if db :
DO_SOMETHING:
a) If
Guido van Rossum added the comment:
Can you also think about how this would be wrapped in asyncio?
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Changes by Terry J. Reedy tjre...@udel.edu:
--
title: Use multiprocessing in compileall script - Compileall script: add
option to use multiple cores
___
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New submission from Thomas Kluyver:
The compileall module's command line interface has a -q (quiet) flag which
suppresses most of the output, but it still prints error messages. I'd like an
entirely silent mode with no output.
My use case is byte-compiling Python files as part of a graphical
Jesús Cea Avión added the comment:
I could be wrong, but I think this is an Oracle Berkeley DB bug. I contacted
Oracle yesterday about this. Stand by.
--
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue21324
Changes by Jesús Cea Avión j...@jcea.es:
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title: dbhash leaks random memory fragments to a database - dbhash/bsddb leaks
random memory fragments to a database
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue21324
Ezio Melotti added the comment:
This seems a reasonable request. Do you want to propose a patch?
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keywords: +easy
nosy: +ezio.melotti
stage: - needs patch
type: - enhancement
versions: +Python 3.5
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