On Saturday, 16 March 2019 16:50:23 UTC+11, dieter wrote:
> Martin De Kauwe writes:
>
> > I'm trying to write a script that will make a checkout from a svn repo and
> > build the result for the user. However, when I attempt to interface with
> > the shell it asks the user for their filename an
Martin De Kauwe writes:
> I'm trying to write a script that will make a checkout from a svn repo and
> build the result for the user. However, when I attempt to interface with the
> shell it asks the user for their filename and I don't know how to capture
> this with my implementation.
>
> us
Sayth Renshaw at 2019/2/3 UTC+8 AM9:52:50 wrote:
> Or perhaps use a 3rd party library like
> https://github.com/mikeckennedy/python-switch
Thank you for this link. It's a good general implementation.
--Jach
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> -Original Message-
> From: Python-list bounces+jcasale=activenetwerx@python.org> On Behalf Of Simon
> Connah
> Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2019 3:03 AM
> To: Python
> Subject: asyncio Question
>
> Hi,
>
> Hopefully this isn't a stupid question. For the record I am using Python
> 3.7
Hi,
I'm trying to write a script that will make a checkout from a svn repo and
build the result for the user. However, when I attempt to interface with the
shell it asks the user for their filename and I don't know how to capture this
with my implementation.
user = "XXX578"
root="https://trac
On 3/15/2019 8:47 AM, Arup Rakshit wrote:
Hi,
I am reading a book where it says that:
Just like module-level function definitions, the definition of a local function
happens at run time when the def keyword is executed. Interestingly, this means
that each call to sort_by_last_letter results i
Nice explanation. Thank you very much.
Thanks,
Arup Rakshit
a...@zeit.io
> On 15-Mar-2019, at 6:24 PM, Calvin Spealman wrote:
>
> This is actually part of a not entirely uncommon misconception that can arise
> by comparing objects only by their
> repr() outputs (the string representatio
This is actually part of a not entirely uncommon misconception that can
arise by comparing objects only by their
repr() outputs (the string representation created when you pass them to
print).
You're comparing the ID or memory address of the objects and determining
they must be the same object. In
Hi,
I am reading a book where it says that:
Just like module-level function definitions, the definition of a local function
happens at run time when the def keyword is executed. Interestingly, this means
that each call to sort_by_last_letter results in a new definition of the
function last_let