Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-27 Thread Akand Islam
On Nov 27, 4:38 pm, Robert Kern wrote: > On 2010-11-26 18:23 , Akand Islam wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > On Nov 26, 3:50 pm, Cameron Simpson  wrote: > >> On 26Nov2010 13:15, Akand Islam  wrote: > >> | Thanks for your posting. Like, here is the following Matlab codes > >> | which I am trying to tran

Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-27 Thread Robert Kern
On 2010-11-26 18:23 , Akand Islam wrote: On Nov 26, 3:50 pm, Cameron Simpson wrote: On 26Nov2010 13:15, Akand Islam wrote: | Thanks for your posting. Like, here is the following Matlab codes | which I am trying to transform into Python. Here you | will find "profile clear, profile on, profile

Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-26 Thread Akand Islam
On Nov 26, 3:50 pm, Cameron Simpson wrote: > On 26Nov2010 13:15, Akand Islam wrote: > | Thanks for your posting. Like, here is the following Matlab codes > | which I am trying to transform into Python. Here you > | will find "profile clear, profile on, profile off, profile resume, > | profile vie

Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-26 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 26Nov2010 13:15, Akand Islam wrote: | Thanks for your posting. Like, here is the following Matlab codes | which I am trying to transform into Python. Here you | will find "profile clear, profile on, profile off, profile resume, | profile viewer, and drawnow" syntaxes. So, what will be these | e

Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-26 Thread Akand Islam
On Nov 26, 12:37 am, Tim Roberts wrote: > Akand Islam wrote: > > >Can anyone please suggest me what will be the good way to use matlab > >equivalent of "profile clear, profile on, profile off, profile resume > >and profile viewer" in Python? > > Python has a number of ways of measuring elapsed ti

Re: Matlab equivalent syntax in Python

2010-11-25 Thread Tim Roberts
Akand Islam wrote: > >Can anyone please suggest me what will be the good way to use matlab >equivalent of "profile clear, profile on, profile off, profile resume >and profile viewer" in Python? Python has a number of ways of measuring elapsed time, including the "timeit" module and the "trace" mo