On 12月9日, 下午2时01分, "Chris Rebert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 9:53 PM, RP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello All,
>
> > This is my first REAL post(question) to Python-List. I know I can take input
> > from a user with raw_input()
> > How do I take password input in console
Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I came across a javascript library that returns all sorts of html
> codes in the cookies it sets and I need my web framework (written in
> python :)) to decode them. I'm aware of htmlentitydefs but
> htmlentitydefs.entitydefs.keys( ) are of the form 'xx'
Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
> I came across a javascript library that returns all sorts of html
> codes in the cookies it sets and I need my web framework (written in
> python :)) to decode them. I'm aware of htmlentitydefs but
> htmlentitydefs.entitydefs.keys( ) are of the form 'xx' but this
> ja
On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 14:21:40 +, MRAB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jorgen Grahn wrote:
>> On Sat, 06 Dec 2008 10:01:10 +, Arnaud Delobelle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> ...
>>> Why use (open, gzp.GzipFile)[Entry.endswith(".gz")] when we have had
>>> contitional expressions for a few
> The MindTree project can be found and downloaded here:
> http://code.google.com/p/mindtree/
>
I suppose it might be a python3-problem:
% /usr/local/bin/python3.0 MindTree.pyw
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "MindTree.pyw", line 2, in
from future_builtins import *
ImportError:
There are others but they do not support both Python and PHP. Should
I implement my own ORB, or do you know a suitable solution?
The whole purpose of an ORB ist that it is interoperable. So if you
have a good python orb (I personally prefer OmniORB), and a good one
for PHP - connect them.
Laszlo Nagy schrieb:
There are others but they do not support both Python and PHP. Should
I implement my own ORB, or do you know a suitable solution?
The whole purpose of an ORB ist that it is interoperable. So if you
have a good python orb (I personally prefer OmniORB), and a good one
f
On Dec 8, 6:43 pm, william tanksley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 5, 6:21 pm, "Daniel Fetchinson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > I'd like this new way of defining methods, what do you guys think?
> > Anyone ready for writing a PEP?
snip
>
> I see a lot of people are against it; I admit th
simonh a écrit :
Thanks for the many replies. Thanks especially to Pierre. This works
perfectly:
(snip)
Ok, now for some algorithmic stuff:
def checkAge(age,min=18,max=31):
if age in list(range(min, max)):
print('Come on in!')
elif age < min:
print('Sorry, too young.'
william tanksley a écrit :
On Dec 5, 6:21 pm, "Daniel Fetchinson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
I'd like this new way of defining methods, what do you guys think?
Anyone ready for writing a PEP?
I think it's an awesome proposal. It's about time! With this change,
defining methods uses the same sp
On Dec 8, 9:42 pm, Senthil Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Pythoneers !
> Can somebody give a quick solution?
> I am trying to raise exceptions in python and trying to handle it in
> C.
> I am able to raise exceptions successfully. However could not catch
> those in C.
> I am using the follow
On Dec 9, 12:33 pm, Ivan Illarionov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 8, 9:42 pm, Senthil Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi Pythoneers !
> > Can somebody give a quick solution?
> > I am trying to raise exceptions in python and trying to handle it in
> > C.
> > I am able to raise exception
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> En Mon, 08 Dec 2008 12:34:03 -0200, Cong Ma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
>
>> I'm writing a program that pickles an instance of a custom subclass of
>> datetime.tzinfo. I followed the guides given in the Library Reference
>> (version
>> 2.5.2, chapter 5.1.6), which cont
On 9 Dez., 11:51, Helmut Jarausch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was somewhat surprised when I ran pystones with python-2.5.2 and
> with python-3.0
>
> On my old/slow machine I get
>
> python-2.5.2
> from test import pystone
> pystone.pystones()
>gives (2.73, 18315.018315018315)
>
> py
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Dec 6, 4:15 pm, Carl Banks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
>
> This brings up another question, what would one use when referencing
> method names inside the class definition?:
>
> class C:
> def self.method(arg):
> self.value = arg
> def self.othe
zalli,
du spills jo net mat am volley oder? mengs de du kinns dann mat mengem
auto an den MCM an eventuell op sandweiler fueren? well méindes ass
volley, densdes fussball, an mettwochs ass schon hellejen owend...
nuecht
antoine
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Roy Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Nick Craig-Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > My favourite mistake when I made the transition was calling methods
> > without parentheses. In perl it is common to call methods without
> > parentheses - in python this
On 9 Des, 05:52, alex23 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> From my perspective, it was less the original complaint and more the
> sudden jump to "CPython is dead! The GIL sucks! Academic eggheads!"
> that prompted the comparisons to trolling.
To be fair to the complainant, before mentioning the GIL, h
2008/12/4 Chris Mellon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Aside from the cultural indoctrination, though (and that may be a real
> and strong force when dealing with math software, and I don't want to
> discount it in general, just for purposes of this discussion) why is
> it more sensible to use "x" here inst
greg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Duncan Booth wrote:
>> If I'm logged in to one of my servers in a large datacentre then I
>> don't what that system to beep as that would be pretty useless.
>
> It also might cause the datacentre operators some consternation
> when one of their servers starts mys
On Tue, 09 Dec 2008 04:39:55 -0800, Paul Boddie wrote:
> To be fair to the complainant, before mentioning the GIL, he did
> initially get the usual trite fragments of the Zen of Python right back
> at him ("simple is better than complex", "special cases aren't special
> enough to break the rules"
Hello all,
I need to compile python myself because of a module (pivy). So I
downloaded MS Visual C++ 2008 express edition. It apparently compiled
fine but I don't know how to install it to recreate the standard
distribution. In linux i'd take "make install", but on windows?
Regards,
Juan Pablo
Nick Craig-Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On the other hand, leaving out the parens returns the function itself,
> > which you can then call later. I've often used this to create data-driven
> > logic.
>
> I didn't say it wasn't useful, just that if you came from Perl like I
> did, it
On 9 Des, 14:24, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au> wrote:
>
> That is not what Guido said. What he actually said was:
>
> "That's possible with sufficiently powerful parser technology, but
> that's not how the Python parser (and most parsers, in my experience)
> treat reserved
simonh a écrit :
Thanks for the extra tips Ivan and Bruno. Here is how the program
looks now. Any problems?
import sys
def get_name():
name = input('Please enter your name: ')
print('Hello', name)
This one would be better spelled "get_and_display_name" !-)
def get_age():
t
the following would be nicer:
def run():
get_name()
a = get_age()
check_age(a)
again()
if __name__ == "__main__":
run()
In this setup your script will only be run if it's started by itself,
but when using a import, the functions from the script can be executed
separately.
-
Helmut Jarausch wrote:
I know that processing unicode is inherently slower,
but still I was surprised that it's so much slower.
Is there any hope Python-3.0 will get faster or
is the main potential for optimizations exhausted, already?
That's not to start a flame war!
I know computers get faste
Steven DAprano wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 14:24:59 +, Rasmus Fogh wrote:
>> For my personal problem I could indeed wrap all objects in a wrapper
>> with whatever 'correct' behaviour I want (thanks, TJR). It does seem a
>> bit much, though, just to get code like this to work as intended:
>>
On Dec 8, 9:02 pm, simonh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the many replies. Thanks especially to Pierre. This works
> perfectly:
> def getAge():
> while True:
> try:
> age = int(input('Please enter your age: '))
> return age
>
> except ValueErr
On Dec 8, 10:34 pm, Eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I am interested in participating in Google Summer of Code 2009,
> hopefully for something in Python. I realize that this is way before
> it begins, but I would like to start to get to know the community
> better and find something that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unless you are calling reload() on the module, it will only ever get
_loaded_ once. Each additional import will just yield the existing
module. Perhaps if you post an example of the behavior that leads you
to believe that the class variables are getting reinitialized I c
Steven DAprano wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 14:24:59 +, Rasmus Fogh wrote:
snip
>> What might be a sensible behaviour (unlike your proposed wrapper)
Sorry
1) I was rude,
2) I thanked TJR for your wrapper class proposal in a later mail. It is
yours.
> What do you dislike about my wrapper cla
On 9 Dez., 07:51, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> En Mon, 08 Dec 2008 20:09:23 -0200, resi147 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
>
> > I'm wondering if it's really a bug since it's so trivial:
>
> > fp = open('/etc/services')
> > ct = fp.read(1048)
> > print(ct[-80:], end=''
On Dec 8, 2:24 pm, Rasmus Fogh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So, I would much prefer a language change. I am not competent to even
> propose one properly, but I'll try.
I don't see any technical problems in what you propose: as
far as I can see it's entirely feasible. However:
> should. On the
Hi,
I was somewhat surprised when I ran pystones with python-2.5.2 and
with python-3.0
On my old/slow machine I get
python-2.5.2
from test import pystone
pystone.pystones()
gives (2.73, 18315.018315018315)
python-3.0
from test import pystone
pystone.pystones()
gives (4.2705,
Thanks for the extra tips Ivan and Bruno. Here is how the program
looks now. Any problems?
import sys
def get_name():
name = input('Please enter your name: ')
print('Hello', name)
def get_age():
try:
return int(input('Please enter your age: '))
except ValueE
Some of our real femme http://wesexy.byethost8.com/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Oops, sorry, this message was not intended for the group.
Apologies
Antoine De Groote wrote:
> zalli,
>
> du spills jo net mat am volley oder? mengs de du kinns dann mat mengem
> auto an den MCM an eventuell op sandweiler fueren? well méindes ass
> volley, densdes fussball, an mettwochs ass schon
Paul Boddie wrote:
On 9 Des, 14:24, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au> wrote:
That is not what Guido said. What he actually said was:
"That's possible with sufficiently powerful parser technology, but
that's not how the Python parser (and most parsers, in my experience)
trea
En Tue, 09 Dec 2008 11:32:46 -0200, Juan Pablo Romero Méndez
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
I need to compile python myself because of a module (pivy). So I
downloaded MS Visual C++ 2008 express edition. It apparently compiled
fine but I don't know how to install it to recreate the standard
dis
On Dec 6, 10:15 am, "Russ P." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 6, 4:32 am, Andreas Waldenburger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Sat, 6 Dec 2008 04:02:54 -0800 (PST) [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > > class C:
> > > def $method(arg):
> > > $value = arg
>
> > > (Note there's no p
On Sun, 2008-12-07 at 11:05 +0900, Bertilo Wennergren wrote:
> Aahz wrote:
>
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>
> > Bertilo Wennergren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >> I don't suppose there is any introductory material out there that is
> >> based on Python 3000 and that is also geared at
On Dec 8, 2:53 am, Ethan Furman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings All!
>
> I nearly have support complete for dBase III dbf/dbt files -- just
> wrapping up support for dates. The null value has been a hindrance for
> awhile but I nearly have that solved as well.
>
> For any who know of a cool
On Dec 8, 10:27 pm, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 9, 3:00 pm, Steven D'Aprano
>
>
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 19:10:00 -0800, Robert Dailey wrote:
> > > On Dec 8, 6:26 pm, Terry Reedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >> Robert Dailey wrote:
> > >> > stuff
Hi,
Is there a built in way to 'pretty print' a dict, list, and tuple
(Amongst other types)? Dicts probably print the ugliest of them all,
and it would be nice to see a way to print them in a readable way. I
can come up with my own function to do this, but I don't want to do
this if I don't have t
On Dec 9, 2008, at 4:31 AM, Brian Allen Vanderburg II wrote:
There is one situation where a module can be imported/executed
twice, if it is the __main__ module.
That's an excellent point -- this is something I've run into, and it
always feels a bit awkward to code around it. What's the stan
On Dec 9, 4:31 pm, Robert Dailey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a built in way to 'pretty print' a dict, list, and tuple
> (Amongst other types)? Dicts probably print the ugliest of them all,
> and it would be nice to see a way to print them in a readable way. I
> can come up with my
On Tue, 09 Dec 2008 17:31:41 +0200, Robert Dailey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is there a built in way to 'pretty print' a dict, list, and tuple
(Amongst other types)? Dicts probably print the ugliest of them all,
and it would be nice to see a way to print them in a readable way. I
can come up wi
On 2008-12-09, greg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Duncan Booth wrote:
>
>> If I'm logged in to one of my servers in a large datacentre
>> then I don't what that system to beep as that would be pretty
>> useless.
>
> It also might cause the datacentre operators some
> consternation when one of their
On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 7:31 AM, Robert Dailey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a built in way to 'pretty print' a dict, list, and tuple
> (Amongst other types)? Dicts probably print the ugliest of them all,
> and it would be nice to see a way to print them in a readable way. I
> can co
Hello everyone,
I have a problem with inheritance from list. I want to create a tree
like object where child nodes are kept in self[:] and every child has a
field that points to its parent. Pickling such an object, however,
throws an AssertionError. See below for source code and output of an
>> I came across a javascript library that returns all sorts of html
>> codes in the cookies it sets and I need my web framework (written in
>> python :)) to decode them. I'm aware of htmlentitydefs but
>> htmlentitydefs.entitydefs.keys( ) are of the form 'xx' but this
>> javascript library uses
On Dec 9, 6:26 am, André <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 8, 10:34 pm, Eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> You should have a look athttp://wiki.python.org/moin/SummerOfCode
>
> It's still early, so there's nothing yet for 2009, but I am sure that
> some ongoing projects mentioned in previous yea
On 2008-12-08, Bill McClain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2008-12-08, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > In this context 'str' means Python 3.0's str type, which is unicode in
> > 2.x. Please report the misleading error message.
> So this is an encoding problem? Can you give me a
On Dec 9, 8:28 am, MRAB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
snip
> In some languages (I think Delphi is one of them - it's been a while!)
> some words which would normally be identifiers have a special meaning in
> certain contexts, but the syntax precludes any ambiguity, and not in a
> difficult way. "as"
On Dec 9, 10:36 am, Joe Strout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 9, 2008, at 4:31 AM, Brian Allen Vanderburg II wrote:
>
> > There is one situation where a module can be imported/executed
> > twice, if it is the __main__ module.
>
> That's an excellent point -- this is something I've run into,
I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
def myfunction():
# do some stuff stuff
my_string = function_that_returns_string()
# do some stuff with my_string
del my_string
# do some other stuff
r
On Dec 9, 11:28 am, Bill McClain
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2008-12-08, Bill McClain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On 2008-12-08, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > In this context 'str' means Python 3.0's str type, which is unicode in
> > > 2.x. Please report the misleading
Hello Klaus,
> I have a problem with inheritance from list. I want to create a tree
> like object where child nodes are kept in self[:] and every child has a
> field that points to its parent. Pickling such an object, however,
> throws an AssertionError. See below for source code and output of an
Hi comp.lang.python
I am a novice Python 2.5 programmer, who write some cmd line scripts
for processing large amounts of data.
I would like to have possibility to regularly print out the progress
made during the processing, say every 1 seconds, and i am wondering
what a proper generic way to do t
On 9 Dec., 17:35, Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
>
> def myfunction():
> # do some stuff stuff
> my_string = function_that_returns_string()
> # do some stuff with my_string
>
On 2008-12-09, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This puzzles me too. According to the documentation StringIO accepts
> both byte strings and unicode strings. Try to replace
>output.write('First line.\n')
> with
>output.write(unicode('First line.\n'))
> or
>output.write(st
On Dec 9, 9:28 am, MRAB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I certainly wouldn't want something like PL/I, where "IF", "THEN" and
> "ELSE" could be identifiers, so you could have code like:
>
> IF IF = THEN THEN
> THEN = ELSE;
> ELSE
> ELSE = IF;
Although I agree with the sen
On 9 Dec, 16:35, Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
>
> def myfunction():
> # do some stuff stuff
> my_string = function_that_returns_string()
> # do some stuff with my_string
>
I code in Python 2.x intermittently and have only casually watched the
3.x development discussions. Now it's time to get up to speed.
Has someone written a tutorial for people in my situation. Yes, I've
looked at the release notes, but I'm looking for something that
motivates all the major change
On Dec 9, 11:35 am, Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
>
> def myfunction():
> # do some stuff stuff
> my_string = function_that_returns_string()
> # do some stuff with my_string
On Dec 9, 11:58 am, Tim Daneliuk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I code in Python 2.x intermittently and have only casually watched the
> 3.x development discussions. Now it's time to get up to speed.
> Has someone written a tutorial for people in my situation. Yes, I've
> looked at the release note
On Dec 9, 2008, at 11:35 AM, Albert Hopkins wrote:
I'm looking at a person's code and I see a lot of stuff like this:
def myfunction():
# do some stuff stuff
my_string = function_that_returns_string()
# do some stuff with my_string
del my_stri
I have been debugging a distributed application for about 2 days that
has a memory leak. My app is a Twisted app, so I thought that maybe it
was on the twisted side, I finally isolated it to no being a Twisted
problem but a Python problem. The problem comes from the code that uses
wxPython and
Bill McClain wrote:
> I've just installed 2.6, had been using 2.4.
>
> This was working for me:
>
> #! /usr/bin/env python
> import StringIO
> out = StringIO.StringIO()
> print >> out, 'hello'
>
> I used 2to3, and added import from future to get:
>
> #! /usr/bin/env python
Say I have module foo.py:
def a(x):
def b():
x
del x
If I run foo.py under Python 2.4.4 I get:
File "foo.py", line 4
del x
SyntaxError: can not delete variable 'x' referenced in nested
scope
Under Python
What did I do wrong?
Old Python version? :)
Seems to work in 3.0 (don't have 2.6 currently to check but IMO it's
fixed there as well).
It works for me with v3.0 as well, but not with v2.6.1 (same error as
stated before for v2.4).
Is there any way to fix this in v2.6.1 or even v2.4? Right now I
Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
I ran these tests on linux 2.6 (ubuntu 8.04) using python 2.5.2.
Have you tried the much newer 2.6? 2.5.3 will be out soon with some bug
fixes.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Tim Daneliuk wrote:
I code in Python 2.x intermittently and have only casually watched the
3.x development discussions. Now it's time to get up to speed.
Has someone written a tutorial for people in my situation. Yes, I've
looked at the release notes, but I'm looking for something that
motivate
On Dec 9, 7:48 am, Paul Boddie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9 Des, 14:24, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> cybersource.com.au> wrote:
>
> > That is not what Guido said. What he actually said was:
>
> > "That's possible with sufficiently powerful parser technology, but
> > that's not how th
Robert Dailey wrote:
When I do:
for key in stuff.keys():
It works! I wonder why .keys() makes a difference. It is using a
'view', which is a new concept in Python 3.0 that I'm not totally
familiar with yet.
Because stuff.keys() is evaluated *once* and the result is a separate
object from s
On Tue, 9 Dec 2008 at 08:40, Slaunger wrote:
I am a novice Python 2.5 programmer, who write some cmd line scripts
for processing large amounts of data.
I would like to have possibility to regularly print out the progress
made during the processing, say every 1 seconds, and i am wondering
what a
On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 6:39 AM, Paul Boddie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9 Des, 05:52, alex23 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> From my perspective, it was less the original complaint and more the
>> sudden jump to "CPython is dead! The GIL sucks! Academic eggheads!"
>> that prompted the comparis
Aaron Brady wrote:
On Dec 9, 8:28 am, MRAB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
snip
In some languages (I think Delphi is one of them - it's been a while!)
some words which would normally be identifiers have a special meaning in
certain contexts, but the syntax precludes any ambiguity, and not in a
diffic
On Tue, 9 Dec 2008 at 13:11, Albert Hopkins wrote:
Say I have module foo.py:
def a(x):
def b():
x
del x
[...]
The difference is under Python 2.4 I get a traceback with the lineno and
offending line, but I do not get a traceback in Pythons 2.6 and 3.0.
On 2008-12-09, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> out = io.StringIO()
> >>> print(u"hello", file=out, end=u"\n")
> >>> out.getvalue()
> u'hello\n'
That has the benefit of working. Thank you!
That can't be the intended behavior of print(), can it? Insering non-unicode
spaces and line te
Slaunger wrote:
Hi comp.lang.python
I am a novice Python 2.5 programmer, who write some cmd line scripts
for processing large amounts of data.
I would like to have possibility to regularly print out the progress
made during the processing, say every 1 seconds, and i am wondering
what a proper g
Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> def otherfunction():
> try:
> # some stuff
> except SomeException, e:
> # more stuff
> del e
> return
>
>
> I think this looks ugly, but also does it not hurt p
Bill McClain wrote:
On 2008-12-09, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
out = io.StringIO()
print(u"hello", file=out, end=u"\n")
out.getvalue()
u'hello\n'
That has the benefit of working. Thank you!
That can't be the intended behavior of print(), can it? Insering non-unicode
spaces and li
I just released Spring Python 0.9.1. One of our users spotted an error
in the http://springpython.webfactional.com/reference/html/
objects.html">IoC container involving constructor arguments, and I
was able to reproduce the problem, patch it, and get it released
quickly to the user community. You c
Mark Dickinson wrote:
> On Dec 8, 2:24 pm, Rasmus Fogh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> So, I would much prefer a language change. I am not competent to even
>> propose one properly, but I'll try.
> I don't see any technical problems in what you propose: as
> far as I can see it's entirely feasibl
On 2008-12-09, MRAB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In Python 2.x unmarked string literals are bytestrings. In Python 3.x
> they're Unicode. The intention is to make the transition from 2.x to 3.x
> easier by adding some features of 3.x to 2.x, but without breaking
> backwards compatibility (not e
Bill McClain wrote:
> On 2008-12-09, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> >>> out = io.StringIO()
>> >>> print(u"hello", file=out, end=u"\n")
>> >>> out.getvalue()
>> u'hello\n'
>
> That has the benefit of working. Thank you!
>
> That can't be the intended behavior of print(), can it? In
You grossly overvalue using the "in" operator on lists. It's far more
common to use a dict or set for containment tests, due to O(1)
performance rather than O(n). I doubt the numpy array supports
hashing, so an error for misuse is all you should expect.
In the rare case that you want to test for
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Klaus Kopec <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> What did I do wrong?
> > Old Python version? :)
> > Seems to work in 3.0 (don't have 2.6 currently to check but IMO it's
> > fixed there as well).
> It works for me with v3.0 as well, but not with v2.6.1 (same error as
>
On Tue, 9 Dec 2008 at 18:55, Duncan Booth wrote:
Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
def otherfunction():
try:
# some stuff
except SomeException, e:
# more stuff
del e
return
I think this looks u
Ivan Illarionov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Dec 8, 9:02 pm, simonh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Thanks for the many replies. Thanks especially to Pierre. This works
>> perfectly:
>
>
>
>> def getAge():
>> while True:
>> try:
>> age = int(input('Please enter your age:
malkarouri a écrit :
(snip)
The del statement doesn't actually free memory. It just removes the
binding from the corresponding namespace. So in your first example,
my_string cannot be used after the deletion. Of course, if the string
referenced by my_string was referenced by some other name then
On Sun, 07 Dec 2008 21:48:46 +, Tim Rowe wrote:
> 2008/12/7 walterbyrd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> IMO: breaking backward compatibility is a big deal, and should only be
>> done when it is seriously needed.
>>
>> Also, IMO, most of, if not all, of the changes being made in 3.0 are
>> debatable, at
conratulatios..
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On Tue, 2008-12-09 at 20:56 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
> Actually I noticed a tendency from open-source projects to have slow
> increment of version number, while proprietary projects usually have
> big
> version numbers.
>
> Linux 2.x: 1991 Python 3.x.x: 1991. Apache 2.0: 1995. OpenOffice.org
> 3.0
Carl Banks wrote:
>[ ... ] Do you want the human reader to have to have all kinds of
> rules to memorize about when a symbol is an identifier and when it's a
> syntactic element? Do you want people to have to learn when to escape
> a symbol so that the parser treats it as an identifier instead of
On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 20:55:16 +, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
>> class C:
>> def createfunc(self):
>> def self.func(arg):
>> return arg + 1
>>
>> Or, after the class definition is done, to extend it dynamically:
>>
>> def C.method(self, arg):
>>
On 9 Dec., 19:35, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I felt like a little lunchtime challenge, so I wrote something that
> I think matches your spec, based on your sample code. This is not
> necessarily the best implementation, but I think it is simpler and
> clearer than yours. The biggest change is t
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Skip Montanaro
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