Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Ben Finney
Steve D'Aprano writes: > On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 10:13 am, Ben Finney wrote: > > See https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328/>, in particular > > https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328/#guido-s-decision>. > > I think you are conflating the package directory and . the current > working directory. I

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 04Feb2017 13:59, Steve D'Aprano wrote: On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 01:13 pm, Cameron Simpson wrote: 1. In your .bashrc file, or equivalent, set the environment variable PYTHONPATH: export PYTHONPATH='./;$PYTHONPATH' You want double quotes (allowing parameter substitution) instead of single quote

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 10:13 am, Ben Finney wrote: > So, for the past ten years and more, Python supports import of modules > from the current directory with an explicit *relative* path:: > > # Absolute imports, searching ‘sys.path’. > import datetime > from collections import namedtuple

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 01:13 pm, Cameron Simpson wrote: >>1. In your .bashrc file, or equivalent, set the environment >> variable PYTHONPATH: >>export PYTHONPATH='./;$PYTHONPATH' > > You want double quotes (allowing parameter substitution) instead of single > quotes here. Or, of course, no quotes a

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
CCed to Neal: could you confirm or refute my suppositions below, or further clarify? Thanks. On 04Feb2017 12:46, Steve D'Aprano wrote: On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 10:13 am, Ben Finney wrote: Neal Becker writes: I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any others. To d

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 04Feb2017 12:16, Steve D'Aprano wrote: On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 03:06 am, Neal Becker wrote: I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the beginning. What's the best way to ensure this is always true

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 10:13 am, Ben Finney wrote: > Neal Becker writes: > >> I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory >> overide any others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' >> at the beginning. > > The ‘sys.path’ list is used only for *absolute* imports. M

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 03Feb2017 17:21, Wildman wrote: On Sat, 04 Feb 2017 09:25:42 +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote: Also, what you describe with rc.local wouldn't work anyway, even if it had ben what was asked. Of course, you are correct. I don't know where my head was. I think my tongue got in front of my eye

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017 03:06 am, Neal Becker wrote: > I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide > any > others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the > beginning. > > What's the best way to ensure this is always true whenever I run python3? For som

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 04Feb2017 10:13, Ben Finney wrote: Neal Becker writes: I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the beginning. The ‘sys.path’ list is used only for *absolute* imports. Modules in the current d

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Wildman via Python-list
On Sat, 04 Feb 2017 09:25:42 +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote: > On 03Feb2017 14:55, Wildman wrote: >>On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 13:19:30 -0700, Michael Torrie wrote: >> >>> On 02/03/2017 12:07 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote: Sorry, I forgot something important. If you use /etc/rc.local, the e

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Ben Finney
Neal Becker writes: > I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory > overide any others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' > at the beginning. The ‘sys.path’ list is used only for *absolute* imports. Modules in the current directory should not be imported with

ANN: Wing Python IDE version 6.0.2 released

2017-02-03 Thread Wingware
Hi, We've just released Wing version 6.0.2 which expands and improves support for remote development, adds a drop down of found Python installations, introduces symbol name style refactoring operations, improves multi-selection with the mouse, fixes debugging Jupyter notebooks, and makes many

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 03Feb2017 14:55, Wildman wrote: On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 13:19:30 -0700, Michael Torrie wrote: On 02/03/2017 12:07 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote: Sorry, I forgot something important. If you use /etc/rc.local, the execute bit must be set. I don't think this is what Neal Becker was asking

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Wildman via Python-list
On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 13:19:30 -0700, Michael Torrie wrote: > On 02/03/2017 12:07 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote: >> Sorry, I forgot something important. If you use >> /etc/rc.local, the execute bit must be set. > > I don't think this is what Neal Becker was asking about. He's talking > about

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Michael Torrie
On 02/03/2017 12:07 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote: > Sorry, I forgot something important. If you use > /etc/rc.local, the execute bit must be set. I don't think this is what Neal Becker was asking about. He's talking about the Python module search path (sys.path) not the operating system PAT

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Wildman via Python-list
On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 12:58:15 -0600, Wildman wrote: > On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 11:06:00 -0500, Neal Becker wrote: > >> I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any >> others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the beginning. >> >> What's the best way

Re: best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Wildman via Python-list
On Fri, 03 Feb 2017 11:06:00 -0500, Neal Becker wrote: > I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any > others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the beginning. > > What's the best way to ensure this is always true whenever I run python3? In p

Re: Meta: mailing list, bounces, and SPF?

2017-02-03 Thread Tim Golden
On 03/02/2017 18:15, Tim Chase wrote: However, despite seeing messages appearing in the online archives, I'm not receiving anything via email. When I send a "subscribe" message to mailman, it responds telling me that I'm already subscribed (and checking the settings on the web interface confirm

Meta: mailing list, bounces, and SPF?

2017-02-03 Thread Tim Chase
Thanks to an abysmal failure of my hosting service (Site5), I was without email for multiple days, and when it came back up, the SPF record was pointed at the wrong place. I normally get a steady stream of comp.lang.python/python-list@ messages at my email address, so when they/I finally got thing

best way to ensure './' is at beginning of sys.path?

2017-02-03 Thread Neal Becker
I want to make sure any modules I build in the current directory overide any others. To do this, I'd like sys.path to always have './' at the beginning. What's the best way to ensure this is always true whenever I run python3? -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Fw: Context

2017-02-03 Thread Terry Reedy
On 2/3/2017 8:10 AM, Antonio wrote: I have python version 3.6.0 installed into my desktop)windows 7) but the menu/context (file,edit..etc) is missing. Run IDLE (there should be a Start menu icon) or install or run another IDE. -- Terry Jan Reedy -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/p

Re: Context

2017-02-03 Thread William Ray Wing
> On Feb 3, 2017, at 8:10 AM, Antonio wrote: > > From: Antonio > Sent: Friday, February 3, 2017 1:02 PM > To: python-list@python.org > Subject: Context > > I have python version 3.6.0 installed into my desktop)windows 7) but the > menu/context (file,edit..etc) i

Numpy and Scipy for Python3.5

2017-02-03 Thread Amit Yaron
Can I find those modules in the FreeBSD ports? -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: PyDictObject to NSDictionary

2017-02-03 Thread Kevin Walzer
On 2/2/17 6:30 PM, Charles Heizer wrote: Hello, I'm embedding python in to my Objective-C app and I need to know how do I convert a PyDictObject (PyObject) to a NSDictionary? Thanks! Does the PyObjC library provide any support for this? It allows integration between the Cocoa API's and Python

Fw: Context

2017-02-03 Thread Antonio
From: Antonio Sent: Friday, February 3, 2017 1:02 PM To: python-list@python.org Subject: Context I have python version 3.6.0 installed into my desktop)windows 7) but the menu/context (file,edit..etc) is missing. How to fix this problem? Thanks Antonio

Get Result based on the Top value

2017-02-03 Thread Meeran Rizvi
Hello guys, Here i am creating a GUI which will act as a search engine. When you search for a data in search box it will fetch the results from the very first page in browser and it is displayed in a Text widget When the TOP value is 10 it should display only the first 10 results based on numbers

Interpolation gives negative values

2017-02-03 Thread Heli
Dear all, I have an ASCII file (f1) with 100M lines with columns x,y,z ( new data points) and then I have a second ASCII file (f2) with 2M lines with columns x,y,z and VALUE (v10).(known data points). I need to interpolate f1 over f2, that is I need to have values for v10 for all coordinated