I'm not a professional coder. I'm an environmental consultant and I use a
I take it all back then...
No! No need to feel apologetic, the Python community works hard to be
inclusive - which I take to include levels of expertise, not merely
countering the various "-isms".
variety of tools de
On 26Mar2020 14:02, dcwhat...@gmail.com wrote:
When we run
logging.basicConfig( filename = "TestLogging_" +
datetime.datetime.now().strftime("%Y%m%d_%H%M%S") + ".log" )
, and then
logging.error( "Test01\n" )
logging.debug("Test02\n")
logging.info("Test03\n")
logging.error( "T
On Fri, 27 Mar 2020, DL Neil via Python-list wrote:
My personal approach is to follow 'the Zen of Python' and prefer
"explicit" over "implicit". (it helps beginners, as well as us old-fogies
whose minds cannot retain things for very long)
DL,
That was my original approach.
I see little poin
Hi,
When we run
logging.basicConfig( filename = "TestLogging_" +
datetime.datetime.now().strftime("%Y%m%d_%H%M%S") + ".log" )
, and then
logging.error( "Test01\n" )
logging.debug("Test02\n")
logging.info("Test03\n")
logging.error( "Test04\n" )
On Fri, Mar 27, 2020 at 7:44 AM Grant Edwards wrote:
>
> On 2020-03-26, Richard Damon wrote:
>
> >> [...] nobody in their right mind would actually
> >> want to generate real output that way.
> >
> > Back in the day it was FREQUENTLY done, in part to show off, anyone
> > could type with a typewri
Rich,
On 26/03/20 9:09 AM, Rich Shepard wrote:
I'm writing an application using Python3 and Tkinter. The views/ directory
contain multiple modules, including one called commonDlgs.py. This contains
classes (such as those for validating data entry) used by all the data
entry
views. Some classe
On 2020-03-26, Richard Damon wrote:
>> [...] nobody in their right mind would actually
>> want to generate real output that way.
>
> Back in the day it was FREQUENTLY done, in part to show off, anyone
> could type with a typewriter and get jagged right margins, but with a
> computer you could get
On 3/26/20 3:20 PM, Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2020-03-26, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
>>> Actually, fixed width fonts are easy to justify, you just add additional
>>> space between words through the line.
>> Yes. It's easy to do it wrong and impossible to do it right :-)
>>
>> (BTDT)
>>
>> The problem
On 2020-03-26, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
>> Actually, fixed width fonts are easy to justify, you just add additional
>> space between words through the line.
>
> Yes. It's easy to do it wrong and impossible to do it right :-)
>
> (BTDT)
>
> The problem is that you can only insert an integral number
On 2020-03-25 16:09:24 -0400, Richard Damon wrote:
> On 3/25/20 3:52 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
> > If anything, I think it was fixed-width fonts which contributed to the
> > decline of hyphenation: With a fixed-width font you can't get a proper
> > justification anyway, and if your right margin is
On Thu, 26 Mar 2020, Schachner, Joseph wrote:
I can only tell you my preference. I prefer that Python modules be as
self-contained as possible, because "global" is within a module; to share
between modules you have to import something, as you know.
Joseph,
This makes good sense. I don't know
Hi,
Our tool can help with this:
https://github.com/devopspp/pyliveupdate/blob/master/README.md#profiler. It can
output a flamegraph and a per-path call summary. Feel free to check it out and
let me know if there is any questions.
-CC
On Friday, March 13, 2020 at 4:52:51 PM UTC-7, Go Luhng wr
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