On 2/17/2021 10:40 AM, Chris Green wrote:
I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
Most of the time (i.e. for a couple of days now) the program has been
satifactorily delivering mail messages, hundreds of them. However one
mail message has provoked the following error:-
chris@
On 2021-02-17 at 17:36:48 +,
Chris Green wrote:
> Stefan Ram wrote:
> > Chris Green writes:
> > >chris@cheddar$ tail mail.err
> > >Traceback (most recent call last):
> > > File "/home/chris/.mutt/bin/filter.py", line 95, in
> > >if sbstrip in msghdr["subject"]:
> > >
On 2021-02-17 at 16:52:55 +,
Chris Green wrote:
> Stefan Ram wrote:
> > Chris Green writes:
> > >But msghdr["subject"] is surely just a string isn't it? Why is it
> > >complaining about something of type 'Header'?
> >
> > What would you do to debug-print the type of an object?
> >
> I
Stestagg wrote:
> I don't particularly like to encourage this shotgun help request because,
> as previous commenter suggests, debugging this yourself is best.
>
> Sometimes debugging is super hard, and especially so when uncommon
> situations occur, but it's always far easier to debug things when
Some sources, in case they help:
Message.get() calls policy.header_fetch_parse (
https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/cd80f430daa7dfe7feeb431ed34f88db5f64aa30/Lib/email/message.py#L471
)
Compat32.header_fetch_parse calls self._sanitize_header (
https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/cd80f430daa7
Stefan Ram wrote:
> Chris Green writes:
> >chris@cheddar$ tail mail.err
> >Traceback (most recent call last):
> > File "/home/chris/.mutt/bin/filter.py", line 95, in
> >if sbstrip in msghdr["subject"]:
> >TypeError: argument of type 'Header' is not iterable
> >But msghdr
I don't particularly like to encourage this shotgun help request because,
as previous commenter suggests, debugging this yourself is best.
Sometimes debugging is super hard, and especially so when uncommon
situations occur, but it's always far easier to debug things when you have
visibility into t
2qdxy4rzwzuui...@potatochowder.com wrote:
> On 2021-02-17 at 16:42:03 +,
> Chris Green wrote:
>
> > 2qdxy4rzwzuui...@potatochowder.com wrote:
> > > On 2021-02-17 at 15:40:27 +,
> > > Chris Green wrote:
> > >
> > > > I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
> > > >
> > > > M
Stefan Ram wrote:
> Chris Green writes:
> >But msghdr["subject"] is surely just a string isn't it? Why is it
> >complaining about something of type 'Header'?
>
> What would you do to debug-print the type of an object?
>
I don't know, what would I do? :-)
Without knowing what provokes the
On 2021-02-17 at 16:42:03 +,
Chris Green wrote:
> 2qdxy4rzwzuui...@potatochowder.com wrote:
> > On 2021-02-17 at 15:40:27 +,
> > Chris Green wrote:
> >
> > > I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
> > >
> > > Most of the time (i.e. for a couple of days now) the program ha
2qdxy4rzwzuui...@potatochowder.com wrote:
> On 2021-02-17 at 15:40:27 +,
> Chris Green wrote:
>
> > I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
> >
> > Most of the time (i.e. for a couple of days now) the program has been
> > satifactorily delivering mail messages, hundreds of them.
On 2021-02-17 at 15:40:27 +,
Chris Green wrote:
> I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
>
> Most of the time (i.e. for a couple of days now) the program has been
> satifactorily delivering mail messages, hundreds of them. However one
> mail message has provoked the following
I'm running this using Python 3.7 on a Linux system.
Most of the time (i.e. for a couple of days now) the program has been
satifactorily delivering mail messages, hundreds of them. However one
mail message has provoked the following error:-
chris@cheddar$ tail mail.err
Traceback (most re
Skip Montanaro writes:
> Thanks, Justin. I imagine editors probably exist which can switch between
> WYSIWYG and markup.
The ‘rsted’ app https://github.com/anru/rsted> is a
reStructuredText WYSIWYG editor written in the Flask framework.
--
\ “Remember: every member of your ‘target audie
On Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 1:16 AM, M.-A. Lemburg wrote:
> Hi Justin,
>
> the default markup is currently set to restructuredtext:
>
> https://github.com/python/pythondotorg/blob/master/jobs/models.py
>
> but this can be changed to any of these supported ones:
>
> https://github.com/jamesturk/django
Hi Justin,
the default markup is currently set to restructuredtext:
https://github.com/python/pythondotorg/blob/master/jobs/models.py
but this can be changed to any of these supported ones:
https://github.com/jamesturk/django-markupfield
as long as we make sure that all existing records contin
Thanks, Justin. I imagine editors probably exist which can switch between
WYSIWYG and markup. Whether that markup can be Markdown or not, I don't
know. Marc-André Lemburg listed a few possible editors in the ticket he
opened, but I've not dug into their properties.
Skip
On Sun, Nov 12, 2017 at 11
On Sat, Nov 11, 2017 at 3:27 PM, Skip Montanaro
wrote:
> The Python Job Board could use a little help in a couple areas. One, we can
> always use help reviewing and approving (or rejecting) submissions. The
> backlog keeps growing, and the existing volunteers who help can't always
> keep up. (Thi
The Python Job Board could use a little help in a couple areas. One, we can
always use help reviewing and approving (or rejecting) submissions. The
backlog keeps growing, and the existing volunteers who help can't always
keep up. (This is a good problem to have, reflecting on Python's broad
popular
Kryptxy via Python-list writes:
> I have a group of arguments, say: (-a, -b, -c, -d, -e) [lets call it group1]
> I have another group, say: (-z, -y, -x, -w) [lets call it group2]
Argument groups are a feature to control the help output from the
parser:
When an argument is added to the grou
Hi,
I am trying to figure out something with argparse.
Here is a scenario:
I have a group of arguments, say: (-a, -b, -c, -d, -e) [lets call it group1]
I have another group, say: (-z, -y, -x, -w) [lets call it group2]
Code:
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Test this s
Kryptxy via Python-list writes:
> ...
> I am new to python. While learning python, I began a side project. Its a
> command-line search program.
> ...
> But, I am unable to understand how I should begin structuring the project
> (updating code according to OOP). If someone could have a look? Coul
Hello,
I am new to python. While learning python, I began a side project. Its a
command-line search program.
Here: https://github.com/kryptxy/torrench
The project is becoming a little difficult to manage, and before it becomes
more complex, I'd like to sort it out a little and make it more mana
On Friday, April 14, 2017 at 3:27:29 PM UTC+1, Kasper wrote:
> every time i run the program i get this messeage:
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "smartmirror.py", line 159, in get_weather
> temprature2 = "%S%S" % (str(int(weather_obj['currently']['temperature'])),
> degree_sign
On 4/14/2017 10:27 AM, Kasper wrote:
every time i run the program i get this messeage:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "smartmirror.py", line 159, in get_weather
temprature2 = "%S%S" % (str(int(weather_obj['currently']['temperature'])),
degree_sign)
KeyError: 'currently'
Error: 'cu
Kasper wrote:
> every time i run the program i get this messeage:
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "smartmirror.py", line 159, in get_weather
> temprature2 = "%S%S" % (str(int(weather_obj['currently']
['temperature'])),
> degree_sign)
> KeyError: 'currently'
> Error: 'currently
On Sat, 15 Apr 2017 12:27 am, Kasper wrote:
> every time i run the program i get this messeage:
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "smartmirror.py", line 159, in get_weather
> temprature2 = "%S%S" %
> (str(int(weather_obj['currently']['temperature'])),
> degree_sign)
> KeyErr
every time i run the program i get this messeage:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "smartmirror.py", line 159, in get_weather
temprature2 = "%S%S" % (str(int(weather_obj['currently']['temperature'])),
degree_sign)
KeyError: 'currently'
Error: 'currently'. Cannot get weather.
How do i
On 2014-11-11 04:30, Jaimin Ajmeri wrote:
cfl.rr.com> writes:
New B question -- Need help with win32net.NetGroupAddUser. I used Mark
Hammond
sample code to create a new user from his book Python Programming on Win32. I
then added one line to add the newuser to a group.
def CreateUserAndS
cfl.rr.com> writes:
>
> New B question -- Need help with win32net.NetGroupAddUser. I used Mark
Hammond
> sample code to create a new user from his book Python Programming on Win32. I
> then added one line to add the newuser to a group.
> def CreateUserAndShare(userName, fullName):
> home
Am 31.01.2013 18:55, schrieb Peter Pearson:
txid =
'r7A7clvs9waizF+6QEiI0tgAq1ar48JItK3kg9kaeAFXz2vsMsHmOd9r9fhkmtxTz3CQnGAPMaDeKLvgb1A2VA'
secret =
'10812806653842663997bf5971637f86f26c71a4716276d7fa8f323a83588d91:1'
hashlib.sha256(txid+":"+secret).hexdigest()
> 'dfa8769
On Thursday, January 31, 2013 6:55:05 PM UTC+1, Peter Pearson wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 08:43:03 -0800 (PST), kryptox.excha...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
>
> > I'm wondering if anyone can help me as I can't seem to get
>
> > this to work. There is an online dice game that is
>
> > provably fair b
On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 08:43:03 -0800 (PST), kryptox.excha...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'm wondering if anyone can help me as I can't seem to get
> this to work. There is an online dice game that is
> provably fair by calculating the 'dice roll' using using a
> sha256 hash calculated against my transaction
Ok, I'm still stuck! :(
I do however now think that I'm not supposed to use hmac here.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I'm wondering if anyone can help me as I can't seem to get this to work. There
is an online dice game that is provably fair by calculating the 'dice roll'
using using a sha256 hash calculated against my transaction ID generated by me.
The secret used to make the calculation is revealed at the en
Irmen de Jong writes:
> Using Pypy 1.9.0. Importing readline. Using a background thread to get
> input() from
> stdin. It then crashes with:
>
> File "/usr/local/Cellar/pypy/1.9/lib_pypy/pyrepl/unix_console.py", line
> 400, in restore
> signal.signal(signal.SIGWINCH, self.old_sigwinch)
>
Hi.
Using Pypy 1.9.0. Importing readline. Using a background thread to get input()
from
stdin. It then crashes with:
File "/usr/local/Cellar/pypy/1.9/lib_pypy/pyrepl/unix_console.py", line 400,
in restore
signal.signal(signal.SIGWINCH, self.old_sigwinch)
ValueError: signal() must be called
Thanks Everyone. I followed your instructions and my script is
successfully copying the result to the clipboard. Now for the fun. To
work out the rest of the script :)
I use the IDLE IDE and not codepad.org. I just thought that was the
standard for pasting scripts here in this group.
Thanks all.
ledpepper wrote:
#Enter in firstname.lastname (bob.smith)
#Count the amount of letters(x) and vowels(y)
#Then work out if bob is > but not equal to 6 letters
#If firstname is less than 6 print firstnamesurnamexy
#If firstname is equal to or greater than 6 print firstnamexy
#Copy result to clipboa
On 27/05/2010 19:41, ledpepper wrote:
#Enter in firstname.lastname (bob.smith)
#Count the amount of letters(x) and vowels(y)
#Then work out if bob is> but not equal to 6 letters
#If firstname is less than 6 print firstnamesurnamexy
#If firstname is equal to or greater than 6 print firstnamexy
#C
ledpepper wrote:
#Enter in firstname.lastname (bob.smith)
#Count the amount of letters(x) and vowels(y)
#Then work out if bob is > but not equal to 6 letters
#If firstname is less than 6 print firstnamesurnamexy
#If firstname is equal to or greater than 6 print firstnamexy
#Copy result to clipboa
#Enter in firstname.lastname (bob.smith)
#Count the amount of letters(x) and vowels(y)
#Then work out if bob is > but not equal to 6 letters
#If firstname is less than 6 print firstnamesurnamexy
#If firstname is equal to or greater than 6 print firstnamexy
#Copy result to clipboard
http://codepad.
On Oct 30, 2:24 am, erikcw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm trying to write a loop that will build a list of "template
> strings".
>
> My current implementation is *really slow*. It took 15 minutes to
> finish. (final len(list) was about 16k entries.)
>
> #combinations = 12 small templ
On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 19:24:32 -0700, erikcw wrote:
> I'm trying to write a loop that will build a list of "template strings".
>
> My current implementation is *really slow*. It took 15 minutes to
> finish. (final len(list) was about 16k entries.)
What is `list` here? Do you mean ``len(templates
Hi all,
I'm trying to write a loop that will build a list of "template
strings".
My current implementation is *really slow*. It took 15 minutes to
finish. (final len(list) was about 16k entries.)
#combinations = 12 small template strings ie "{{ city }},
{{ state }}..."
#states = either a django
>>> I guess, Apache does some kind of memory caching for files, which are often
>>> requested and small enough to fit into the system memory. May be, that's
>>> what the OP is referring to ...
>
>> I'm not aware of that, and I even more seriously doubt it. Because
>> caching is a complicated, do
Matthew Woodcraft schrieb:
Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sebastian 'lunar' Wiesner schrieb:
I guess, Apache does some kind of memory caching for files, which are often
requested and small enough to fit into the system memory. May be, that's
what the OP is referring to ...
I'm n
Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Sebastian 'lunar' Wiesner schrieb:
>> I guess, Apache does some kind of memory caching for files, which are often
>> requested and small enough to fit into the system memory. May be, that's
>> what the OP is referring to ...
> I'm not aware of that, an
Sebastian 'lunar' Wiesner schrieb:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
[ Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
I finally managed to work with static files with a little hack, but it's
ugly because I'm reading each static file per request.
How else should that work? Apache does that
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
[ "Martin v. Löwis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
>> I guess, Apache does some kind of memory caching for files, which are
>> often requested and small enough to fit into the system memory.
>
> Are you sure about this?
No, I'm not. That's why I said "I gu
> I guess, Apache does some kind of memory caching for files, which are often
> requested and small enough to fit into the system memory.
Are you sure about this? I could not find anything in the documentation
(other than mod_cache and friends, which is an unrelated functionality).
Also, I don't
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
[ Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]
>> I finally managed to work with static files with a little hack, but it's
>> ugly because I'm reading each static file per request.
>
> How else should that work? Apache does that the same way.
I guess, Apac
kib schrieb:
Diez B. Roggisch a écrit :
Tool69 schrieb:
Hi,
Until now, I was running my own static site with Python, but I'm in
need of dynamism.
After reading some cgi tutorials, I saw Joe Gregorio's old article
"Why so many Python web frameworks?" about wsgi apps [http://
bitworking.org/new
Diez B. Roggisch a écrit :
Tool69 schrieb:
Hi,
Until now, I was running my own static site with Python, but I'm in
need of dynamism.
After reading some cgi tutorials, I saw Joe Gregorio's old article
"Why so many Python web frameworks?" about wsgi apps [http://
bitworking.org/news/Why_so_many_
Tool69 schrieb:
Hi,
Until now, I was running my own static site with Python, but I'm in
need of dynamism.
After reading some cgi tutorials, I saw Joe Gregorio's old article
"Why so many Python web frameworks?" about wsgi apps [http://
bitworking.org/news/Why_so_many_Python_web_frameworks] and h
Hi,
Until now, I was running my own static site with Python, but I'm in
need of dynamism.
After reading some cgi tutorials, I saw Joe Gregorio's old article
"Why so many Python web frameworks?" about wsgi apps [http://
bitworking.org/news/Why_so_many_Python_web_frameworks] and have a
question abo
Hi. I have been trying to get Paimei running on Windoze but find it
very inconsistent. It works on certain apps really well, like Notepad,
but fails on other apps, especially those written in languages like
Delphi. There isn't a lot out there on Paimei and the author's site is
very terse on the app
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Mike Kent <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>I figure that if instead of returning the buffer from the context
>directly, I instead returned the buffer in a list, I could then change
>the buffer, put it in the returned list, then I'd have access to it
>back inside the co
I recently found myself needing to do this a lot:
lock a record in a file
read the record into a buffer
alter the buffer
write the buffer back to the record
unlock the record
I'd love to be able to create a context for this to use with the
'with' statement, something like:
from __future__ import
Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
> Boris Borcic wrote:
>> Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
>>> Boris Borcic wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>
> for example...
>
> chaos
>
> each letter equals a number
>
> A=1
>>>
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> En Thu, 01 Nov 2007 20:12:52 -0300, Ricardo Aráoz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> escribió:
>
>>> def sumToOneDigit(num) :
if num < 10 :
return num
else :
return sumToOneDigit(sum(int(i) for i in str(num)))
>
> def sumToO
En Thu, 01 Nov 2007 20:12:52 -0300, Ricardo Aráoz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribió:
>> def sumToOneDigit(num) :
>>> if num < 10 :
>>> return num
>>> else :
>>> return sumToOneDigit(sum(int(i) for i in str(num)))
>>>
def sumToOneDigit(num):
return num % 9 or
Boris Borcic wrote:
> Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
>> Boris Borcic wrote:
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I want to create a program that I type in a word.
for example...
chaos
each letter equals a number
A=1
B=20
and so on.
So Chaos w
Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
> Boris Borcic wrote:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>>>
>>> for example...
>>>
>>> chaos
>>>
>>> each letter equals a number
>>>
>>> A=1
>>> B=20
>>>
>>> and so on.
>>>
>>> So Chaos would be
>>>
>>> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
>
Boris Borcic wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>>
>> for example...
>>
>> chaos
>>
>> each letter equals a number
>>
>> A=1
>> B=20
>>
>> and so on.
>>
>> So Chaos would be
>>
>> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
>>
>> I want to then have those numbers
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>
> for example...
>
> chaos
>
> each letter equals a number
>
> A=1
> B=20
>
> and so on.
>
> So Chaos would be
>
> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
>
> I want to then have those numbers
> 13+4+1+7+5 added together to be
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>
> for example...
>
> chaos
>
> each letter equals a number
>
> A=1
> B=20
>
> and so on.
>
> So Chaos would be
>
> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
>
> I want to then have those numbers
> 13+4+1+7+5 added together to
On 10/28/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I want to then have those numbers
> 13+4+1+7+5 added together to be 30.
>
> How can I do that?
>
> Also, just curious, but, how could I then have the 3 and 0 added
> together to be 3?
>
> Please help me out.
Will you put our names on you
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
>
> You can see that Python has a command to input strings from the
> command line.
>
>> chaos
>> each letter equals a number
>> A=1
>> B=20
>> and so on.
>> So Chaos would be
>> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
>> I want to t
> I want to create a program that I type in a word.
You can see that Python has a command to input strings from the
command line.
> chaos
> each letter equals a number
> A=1
> B=20
> and so on.
> So Chaos would be
> C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
> I want to then have those numbers
> 13+4+1+7+5 added
I want to create a program that I type in a word.
for example...
chaos
each letter equals a number
A=1
B=20
and so on.
So Chaos would be
C=13 H=4 A=1 O=7 S=5
I want to then have those numbers
13+4+1+7+5 added together to be 30.
How can I do that?
Also, just curious, but, how could I
McCann, Brian wrote:
> I posted this to the Twisted list...figured I'd try here too.
Didn't you get an answer? The cracks for special topics are usually
there.
> to work right. Looking through the API docs I found
> "connectionLost()", which I put in my protocol class (EchoProtocol
> in the ex
I posted this to the Twisted list...figured I'd try here too.
I'm looking for what is probably an simple solution I can't figure out
on my own. I'm writing an SSH server based on the example on the web
(using conch). I'm trying to figure out how to detect when the client
exists (for example, whe
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> If I may add another thought along the same line: regular expressions
> seem to tend towards an art form, or an intellectual game. Many
> discussions revolving around regular expressions convey the impression
> that the challenge being pursued is finding a magic formul
> for dense guys like myself, regular expressions work best if you use
> them as simple tokenizers, and they suck pretty badly if you're trying
> to use them as parsers.
:) Well, I'm with you on that one Fredrik! :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> I still don't touch regular expressions... They may be fast, but to
> me they are just as much line noise as PERL... I can usually code a
> partial "parser" faster than try to figure out an RE.
Yes, it seems to me that REs are a bit "hit and miss" - the only way to
tell if you've got a RE "righ
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On 25 Sep 2006 10:25:01 -0700, "codefire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>> Yes, I didn't make it clear in my original post - the purpose of the
>> code was to learn something about regexps (I only started coding Python
>> last w
Yes, I didn't make it clear in my original post - the purpose of the
code was to learn something about regexps (I only started coding Python
last week). In terms of learning "a little more" the example was
successful. However, creating a full email validator is way beyond me -
the rules are far too
"Frank Drackman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
:
: "Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
: news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
: > Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
: > bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Pay
Hi,My $0.02:re.compile('^\w+([\.-]?\w+)[EMAIL PROTECTED]([\.-]?\w+)*\.(\w{2}|(com|net|org|edu|intl|mil|gov|arpa|biz|aero|name|coop|info|pro|museum))$')I picked it up from the Net, and while it may be not perfect (you've got lots of reply's telling you why),it's good enough for me.Good luck,Sorin--
John Machin wrote:
> Ant wrote:
> > John Machin wrote:
> > ...
> > > A little more is unfortunately not enough. The best advice you got was
> > > to use an existing e-mail address validator.
> >
> > We got bitten by this at the last place I worked - we were using a
> > regex email validator (from
Ant wrote:
> John Machin wrote:
> ...
> > A little more is unfortunately not enough. The best advice you got was
> > to use an existing e-mail address validator.
>
> We got bitten by this at the last place I worked - we were using a
> regex email validator (from Microsoft IIRC), and we kept having
Ben Finney wrote:
...
> The best advice I've seen when people ask "How do I validate whether
> an email address is valid?" was "Try sending mail to it".
There are advantages to the regex method. It is faster than sending an
email and getting a positive or negative return code. The delay may not
b
John Machin wrote:
...
> A little more is unfortunately not enough. The best advice you got was
> to use an existing e-mail address validator.
We got bitten by this at the last place I worked - we were using a
regex email validator (from Microsoft IIRC), and we kept having
problems with specific
"John Machin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> A little more is unfortunately not enough. The best advice you got was
> to use an existing e-mail address validator. The definition of a valid
> e-mail address is complicated. You may care to check out "Mastering
> Regular Expressions" by Jeffery Friedl
codefire wrote:
> Hi,
>
> thanks for the advice guys.
>
> Well took the kids swimming, watched some TV, read your hints and
> within a few minutes had this:
>
> r = re.compile(r'[EMAIL PROTECTED]@\s]+\.\w+')
>
> This works for me. That is if you have an invalid email such as
> tony..bATblah.com it
Hi,
thanks for the advice guys.
Well took the kids swimming, watched some TV, read your hints and
within a few minutes had this:
r = re.compile(r'[EMAIL PROTECTED]@\s]+\.\w+')
This works for me. That is if you have an invalid email such as
tony..bATblah.com it will reject it (note the double do
codefire wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to get a regexp to validate email addresses but can't get
> it quite right. The problem is I can't quite find the regexp to deal
> with ignoring the case [EMAIL PROTECTED], which is not valid. Here's
> my attempt, neither of my regexps work quite how I want:
>
On 2006-09-21, codefire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am trying to get a regexp to validate email addresses but
> can't get it quite right. The problem is I can't quite find the
> regexp to deal with ignoring the case [EMAIL PROTECTED],
> which is not valid. Here's my attempt, neither of my regexp
codefire wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to get a regexp to validate email addresses but can't get
> it quite right. The problem is I can't quite find the regexp to deal
> with ignoring the case [EMAIL PROTECTED], which is not valid. Here's
> my attempt, neither of my regexps work quite how I want:
>
Hi,
I am trying to get a regexp to validate email addresses but can't get
it quite right. The problem is I can't quite find the regexp to deal
with ignoring the case [EMAIL PROTECTED], which is not valid. Here's
my attempt, neither of my regexps work quite how I want:
[code]
import os
import re
Kareem840 wrote:
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
>
I accidentally sent $2, could you please refund the e
di wrote:
> "Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
>> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
>> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
>> bal
Kareem840 wrote:
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
>
And I need to get a bus. I mean literally. It's the b
"Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
Frank Drackman wrote:
> "Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
>> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
>> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my
"Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
The money's on the way!
"Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my ca
"Kareem840" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
If you have a story of unusual
In comp.unix.solaris Kareem840 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello. Unfortunately, I am in need of money to pay my credit card
> bills. If you could spare just $1, I would be grateful. I have a Paypal
> account. [EMAIL PROTECTED] I swear this will go to my card
> balances. Thank you.
Better idea. S
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