itools is a Python library, it groups a number of packages into a single
meta-package for easier development and deployment:
itools.abnf itools.i18n itools.stl
itools.core itools.ical itools.tmx
itools.csv itools.odf
This is a Content Management System built on Python itools, among
other features ikaaro provides:
- content and document management (indexsearch, metadata, etc.)
- multilingual user interfaces and content
- high level modules: wiki, forum, tracker, etc.
The new script icms-forget.py reduces
Leo 4.6 final is now available at:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=3458package_id=29106
Leo is a text editor, data organizer, project manager and much more. See:
http://webpages.charter.net/edreamleo/intro.html
The highlights of Leo 4.6:
--
- Cached
Maxim Khitrov wrote:
On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 5:00 PM, Carl Bankspavlovevide...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jul 16, 8:12 am, Gabriel Rossetti gabriel.rosse...@arimaz.com
wrote:
Hello everyone,
I am using threading.Condition.wait(timeout) and was surprised to see
that there is no return value
That test was designed to treat None as a boolean False, without
noticing that numeric 0 is also treated as False and could make the
test do the wrong thing. This is an extremely common type of error.
Actually, I felt that 0 not being considered False would be a better
option.
I had lot of
Piet van Oostrum wrote:
Gabriel Rossetti gabriel.rosse...@arimaz.com (GR) wrote:
GR Hello everyone,
GR I am using threading.Condition.wait(timeout) and was surprised to see that
GR there is no return value nor an exception when wait() is used w/ a timeout.
GR How am I supposed
On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 11:13 PM, koranthalakoranth...@gmail.com wrote:
That test was designed to treat None as a boolean False, without
noticing that numeric 0 is also treated as False and could make the
test do the wrong thing. This is an extremely common type of error.
Actually, I felt
Terry Reedy wrote:
Terry Reedy wrote:
$ file tmp.ps
tmp.ps: PostScript document text conforming DSC level 3.0, type EPS
Try changing the file extension from .ps to .eps.
I will. Thank you.
I tried it. Unfortunately, OOo does not open it correctly. It just
displays the first three
Ben Finney wrote:
Howdy all,
The following is a common idiom::
class FooGonk(object):
def frobnicate(self):
Frobnicate this gonk.
basic_implementation(self.wobble)
class BarGonk(FooGonk):
def frobnicate(self):
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 20:26:39 -0700, akhil1988 wrote:
Well, you were write: unintentionally I removed strip(). But the problem does
not ends here:
I get this error now:
File ./temp.py, line 488, in module
main()
File ./temp.py, line 475, in main
for line in sys.stdin:
File
Hello!
I've solved this problem, using pyCurl.
Here is sample code.
import pycurl
import StringIO
b = StringIO.StringIO()
c = pycurl.Curl()
url = 'https://example.com/'
c.setopt(pycurl.URL, url)
c.setopt(pycurl.WRITEFUNCTION, b.write)
c.setopt(pycurl.CAINFO, 'cert.crt')
c.setopt(pycurl.SSLKEY,
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 23:13:51 -0700, koranthala wrote:
That test was designed to treat None as a boolean False, without
noticing that numeric 0 is also treated as False and could make the
test do the wrong thing. This is an extremely common type of error.
Actually, I felt that 0 not being
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
It is very useful to be able to write e.g.:
if header or body or footer:
print assemble_page(header, body, footer)
and have empty strings to be equivalent to False.
Why doesn't assemble_page properly handle the case where
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 05:19:50 +, Alan G Isaac wrote:
As a recurrent situation, I need to invoke the same method on many
instances. Speed matters, but the solution should be pure Python. Is
the following convenience function a reasonable approach?
def apply2(itr, methodname, *args,
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 12:58:48 +1000, Ben Finney wrote:
Using a decorator in this manner requires repeating the super class
name. Perhaps there is a way to get the bases of BarGonk, but I don't
think so, because at the time that the decorator is called, BarGonk is
not yet fully defined.
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 18:08:45 -0700, Chris Rebert wrote:
You're trying to call an instance method on the class itself, which
doesn't make sense.
Oh I don't know, people do it all the time -- just not the way the OP
did :)
You need to first create an instance of the class to invoke the method
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 11:02:57 -0500, Pablo Torres N. wrote:
On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 22:07, Steven
D'Apranoste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Thu, 09 Jul 2009 18:36:05 -0700, inkhorn wrote:
def list_items_in_string(list_items, string):
for item in list_items:
if item
Hi There,
I gave a lightning talk about my ServiceStation project at Europython
2009. While it
isn't written in Python (C++/Windows), I did write it with python in
mind. Its
released under the CDDL license.
I'm hoping it will be of use to other Python users who will need to
run their
koranthala koranth...@gmail.com (k) wrote:
That test was designed to treat None as a boolean False, without
noticing that numeric 0 is also treated as False and could make the
test do the wrong thing. This is an extremely common type of error.
k Actually, I felt that 0 not being considered
There is stil something not clear in your description.
m I'm using multiprocessing to spawn several subprocesses, each of which
m uses a very large data structure (making it impractical to pass it via
m pipes / pickling). I need to allocate this structure once when the
m process is created and
Oisin Mulvihill wrote:
Hi There,
I gave a lightning talk about my ServiceStation project at Europython
2009. While it
isn't written in Python (C++/Windows), I did write it with python in
mind. Its
released under the CDDL license.
I'm hoping it will be of use to other Python users who will
auror...@gmail.com wrote:
My overall observation is that ctypes function has an overhead that is
2 to 3 times to a similar C extension function. This may become a
limiting factor if the function calls are fine grained. Using ctypes
for performance enhancement is a lot more productive if the
Gabriel Rossetti gabriel.rosse...@arimaz.com (GR) wrote:
GR I have a 1-1 relation, I have a thread reading msgs from a network socket
GR and a method waiting for an answer to arrive (see my thread
GR Threading.Condition problem). I would like to be able to have a timeout
GR as to not block
Announcing Psyco V2 source release
--
This is the long awaited announcement of Psyco V2.
Psyco V2 is a continuation of the well-known psyco project,
which was called finished and was dis-continued by its author
Armin Rigo in 2005, in favor of the PyPy project.
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 09:18:47 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
Yes, the dictatorial a tab always equals 8 spaces
Saying always is incorrect; it is more accurate to say that tab stops
are every 8 columns unless proven otherwise, with the burden of proof
falling on whoever wants to use something different.
In article mailman.2814.1247032175.8015.python-l...@python.org,
Dennis Lee Bieber wlfr...@ix.netcom.com wrote:
On 07 Jul 2009 05:05:12 GMT, Steven D'Aprano
st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
Paraphrasing the Collins Dictionary of
akhil1988 akhilan...@gmail.com (a) wrote:
a Well, you were write: unintentionally I removed strip(). But the problem
does
a not ends here:
a I get this error now:
a File ./temp.py, line 488, in module
a main()
a File ./temp.py, line 475, in main
a for line in sys.stdin:
a File
On Jul 17, 9:34 am, Tim Golden m...@timgolden.me.uk wrote:
Oisin Mulvihill wrote:
Hi There,
I gave a lightning talk about my ServiceStation project at Europython
2009. While it
isn't written in Python (C++/Windows), I did write it with python in
mind. Its
released under the CDDL
On Friday 17 July 2009 06:44:26 aj wrote:
when I try to compile Python 2.6 from source code on ubuntu, I get the
message
/usr/bin/ld: cannot open output file python: Is a directory
This says that there is directory in the sources with same name as will be
named output
It can only occur when
Oisin Mulvihill wrote:
I have to admit I didn't come across srvany before.
It's been part of the Windows Resource Kit since way back,
but like many such things is probably known more by word-of-mouth
than by Internet Searchability
* Properly tracking all child processes launched by the
On Jul 16, 9:26 pm, a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
In article
0afc5c4d-1af5-4d0e-9442-26b51b12e...@m11g2000yqh.googlegroups.com,
hartley hartle...@gmail.com wrote:
If you had loosened up on the sarcasm I would probably have read what
you wrote more thoroughly instead of just skimming
Peter Otten __pete...@web.de writes:
Just thinking aloud: Write a patch for pydoc that looks up the
base-class documentation.
That doesn't scale; I want the docstring to be discovered by the normal
interface (the ‘__doc__’ attribute) by *every* tool that gathers
docstrings from methods.
Also,
Jack Diederich jackd...@gmail.com wrote:
It isn't an OrderedDict thing, it is a comparison thing. Two regular
dicts also raise an error if you try to LT them.
Since when?
Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, Jan 4 2009, 17:40:26)
[GCC 4.3.2] on linux2
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more
Luis Alberto Zarrabeitia Gomez wrote:
Quoting Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
Emile van Sebille wrote:
On 7/16/2009 7:04 AM Unknown said...
On 2009-07-16, Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com wrote:
daysInAdvance = int(inputVar) or 25
I don't
Very good, thank you. I'll try it when I can.
Is Psyco3 going to borrow/steal some ideas/code from Unladen Swallow?
The problem I have with Psyco1.6 is that you can't use the normal
profilers to know how much seconds of running time is taken by each
function/method of your code.
Psyco1.6 has a
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 7:31 AM, Xavier Hocont...@xavierho.com wrote:
I have a simple class that generates prime numbers, using memorisation and
iteration to generate the next prime number.
In the class, I have defined a function that gives, say, the 5th prime
number. Or the 1000th, it's
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 7:33 PM, Andre Engels andreeng...@gmail.com wrote:
Where do you get these Don't do it!s? As far as I know, while true
loops are a very acceptable idiom for programming in Python (and
several other languages).
Hey Andre,
Friends, internet, common sense. Also... while
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 2:58 AM, Peter Otten__pete...@web.de wrote:
Ben Finney wrote:
Howdy all,
The following is a common idiom::
class FooGonk(object):
def frobnicate(self):
Frobnicate this gonk.
basic_implementation(self.wobble)
class
I'm trying to install a package (cx_Oracle) on a mac running 10.5.7.
I've done this on other platforms, but never on a mac. I followed the
instructions given, but when I try and run setup I get:
Apollo:instantclient_10_2 user$ python setup.py build
Hello, I need to determine programmatically a file type from its
content/extension (much like the file UNIX command line utility)
I searched for a suitable Python library module, with little luck. Do
you know something useful ?
Thanks in advance.
--
Seldon
--
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 3:52 AM, Steven
D'Apranost...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 12:58:48 +1000, Ben Finney wrote:
Using a decorator in this manner requires repeating the super class
name. Perhaps there is a way to get the bases of BarGonk, but I don't
think
Seldon sel...@katamail.it writes:
Hello, I need to determine programmatically a file type from its
content/extension (much like the file UNIX command line utility)
The Unix ‘file(1)’ program does its magic with a library called “magic”
and a corresponding database.
I searched for a suitable
Hello, I need to determine programmatically a file type from its
content/extension (much like the file UNIX command line utility)
I searched for a suitable Python library module, with little luck. Do
you know something useful ?
Are you looking for something comprehensive? Or are you just
Seldon wrote:
Hello, I need to determine programmatically a file type from its
content/extension (much like the file UNIX command line utility)
I searched for a suitable Python library module, with little luck. Do
you know something useful ?
Python-magic
Xavier Ho wrote:
I have a simple class that generates prime numbers, using memorisation
and iteration to generate the next prime number.
In the class, I have defined a function that gives, say, the 5th prime
number. Or the 1000th, it's still very fast. But the code isn't what I
really like.
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 00:34:00 -0700, Paul Rubin wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
It is very useful to be able to write e.g.:
if header or body or footer:
print assemble_page(header, body, footer)
and have empty strings to be equivalent to False.
Leo 4.6 final is now available at:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=3458package_id=29106
Leo is a text editor, data organizer, project manager and much more. See:
http://webpages.charter.net/edreamleo/intro.html
The highlights of Leo 4.6:
--
- Cached
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:53:45 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Python has extended the algebra definition of or and and top any
type, but it is so unintuitive (I'm no LISP programmer).
I disagree. The Something/Nothing dichotomy is so intuitive to me that I
would hate to go back to a
On Jul 17, 8:39 pm, VanL van.lindb...@gmail.com wrote:
Seldon wrote:
Hello, I need to determine programmatically a file type from its
content/extension (much like the file UNIX command line utility)
I searched for a suitable Python library module, with little luck. Do
you know something
Apologies for breaking threading, but the original post hasn't showed up
on my ISP's news server.
Xavier Ho wrote:
I have a simple class that generates prime numbers, using memorisation
and iteration to generate the next prime number.
[...]
The next() function generates the next prime, and
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
def assemble_page(header, body, footer):
if header or body or footer:
do_lots_of_expensive_processing()
else:
do_nothing_gracefully()
Why should the processing be expensive if all three fields are empty?
On Friday 17 July 2009 07:06:26 am Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
I was saying that using boolean operators with object instead of boolean
values is error prone, cause no language behaves he same way,
I don't know of many languages that actively promote the duck typing concept,
are as highly
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:53:45 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Given three result codes, where 0 means no error and an arbitrary non-
zero integer means some error, it is simple and easy to write:
failed = result_1 or result_2 or result_3
The equivalent:
failed =
oops, wrong address.
When will reply-to tag appear on the Python mailing list? =/
Good idea, Steven and MRAB.
I changed my code to the following:
def nPrime(self, n):
Returns nth prime number, the first one being 2, where n = 0. When
n = 1, it returns 3.
for x in
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:53:45 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Given three result codes, where 0 means no error and an arbitrary non-
zero integer means some error, it is simple and easy to write:
failed = result_1 or result_2 or
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 07:12:51 -0700, Paul Rubin wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
def assemble_page(header, body, footer):
if header or body or footer:
do_lots_of_expensive_processing()
else:
do_nothing_gracefully()
Why should the
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 10:35 AM, Xavier Hocont...@xavierho.com wrote:
I changed my code to the following:
def nPrime(self, n):
Returns nth prime number, the first one being 2, where n = 0. When
n = 1, it returns 3.
for x in range(n+2):
try:
koranthala wrote:
That test was designed to treat None as a boolean False, without
noticing that numeric 0 is also treated as False and could make the
test do the wrong thing. This is an extremely common type of error.
Actually, I felt that 0 not being considered False would be a better
Piet van Oostrum wrote:
Gabriel Rossetti gabriel.rosse...@arimaz.com (GR) wrote:
GR I have a 1-1 relation, I have a thread reading msgs from a network socket
GR and a method waiting for an answer to arrive (see my thread
GR Threading.Condition problem). I would like to be able
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 11:09 AM, MRABpyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
Python did always have True and False.
Only if always means since python 2.2.1.
See: http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/whatsnew/section-bool.html and
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0285/ for details.
--
Jerry
--
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 16:34:57 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:53:45 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Given three result codes, where 0 means no error and an arbitrary
non- zero integer means some error, it is simple and easy to write:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 16:09:03 +0100, MRAB wrote:
Python did always have True and False.
$ python1.5
Python 1.5.2 (#1, Apr 1 2009, 22:55:54) [GCC 4.1.2 20070925 (Red Hat
4.1.2-27)] on linux2
Copyright 1991-1995 Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam
True, False
Traceback (innermost last):
Hi all,
I wanted to know whether there is a more efficient way to delete an entry
from a dictionary (instead of using the 'del' function), because after
analyzing the time taken by the code, it seems to me that the 'del' function
takes most of the time. I might be incorrect as well.
Kindly help
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 11:02 PM, Jack Diederich jackd...@gmail.com wrote:
If you use an off-the-shelf prime number generator fucntion[1] that
returns consecutive primes the method collapses into a simple
function.
def nPrime(n, primes=[], next_prime=eratosthenes().next):
while
mayank gupta wrote:
after analyzing the time taken by the code,
What code?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Almost every time I've had to do parsing of text over the last 5 years
I've needed this function:
def find_first(s, subs, start=None, end=None):
results = [s.find(sub, start, end) for sub in subs]
results = [r for r in results if r != -1]
if results:
return min(results)
Paul Rubin wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
def assemble_page(header, body, footer):
if header or body or footer:
do_lots_of_expensive_processing()
else:
do_nothing_gracefully()
Why should the processing be expensive if all three fields
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
Since I haven't specified an implementation for assemble_page, it could
be doing *anything*. Perhaps it has to talk to a remote database over a
slow link, perhaps it generates 300 lines of really inefficient HTML code
with no
Sometimes I see relatively small application, generally task scripts,
written as essentially a list of statements. Other times, I see them neatly
divided into functions and then the if __name__ == '__main__': convention.
Is there a preference? Is there an... application scope such that the
I'm building a threaded file searcher that uses some of Fredrik Lundh's (
http://effbot.org/zone/wide-finder.htm) suggestions for parsing text very
quickly in pure python, as I have about a 10GB log file to parse every day.
A naiive approach would be to just parse the 1MB chunks, add the results
On 7/17/2009 7:34 AM Jean-Michel Pichavant said...
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:53:45 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Given three result codes, where 0 means no error and an arbitrary non-
zero integer means some error, it is simple and easy to write:
failed = result_1
Hello,
When an IRC client receive a messages, this message in in a special format
defined here: Message format in pseudo
BNFhttp://www.irchelp.org/irchelp/rfc/chapter2.html#c2_3_1(
http://www.irchelp.org/irchelp/rfc/chapter2.html#c2_3_1 ).
For example we can have:
Sometimes I see relatively small application, generally task scripts,
written as essentially a list of statements. Other times, I see them neatly
divided into functions and then the if __name__ == '__main__': convention.
Is there a preference? Is there an... application scope such that the
I started with ctypes because it is the battery included with the
Python standard library. My code is very fluid and I'm looking for
easy opportunity to optimize it. One example is to find the longest
common prefix among two strings. Right now I am comparing it character
by character with pure
Hi,
I'm new to python and would like to request your help installing
python-gnutls on windows. Are there binaries available which can be
installed ?
Looks like the setup.py file which came with the package is for
Debian. I tried modifying it for windows but am still getting errors.
I am having trouble extending my option parsing.
Any help is appreciated:
import sys
import getopt
import time
def tail(file):
while 1:
where = file.tell()
line = file.readline()
if not line:
time.sleep(1)
file.seek(where)
I'm really new to Python and I am absolutely stumped trying to figure
this out. I have searched plenty, but I am either searching for the
wrong keywords or this isn't possible.
What I want to do is have one import be global for the entire package.
Here is an example...
package
__init__.py
akhil1988 wrote:
mis-ordered reply, bits shown below
Nobody-38 wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:43:37 -0700, akhil1988 wrote:
...
In Python 3 you can't decode strings because they are Unicode strings
and it doesn't make sense to decode a Unicode string. You can only
decode encoded things which
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 16:09:03 +0100, MRAB wrote:
Python did always have True and False.
Oops! I meant didn't, of course.
$ python1.5
Python 1.5.2 (#1, Apr 1 2009, 22:55:54) [GCC 4.1.2 20070925 (Red Hat
4.1.2-27)] on linux2
Copyright 1991-1995 Stichting
On 2009-07-17 12:11, Tim Chase wrote:
Sometimes I see relatively small application, generally task scripts,
written as essentially a list of statements. Other times, I see them
neatly
divided into functions and then the if __name__ == '__main__':
convention.
Is there a preference? Is there an...
Phil schrieb:
I'm really new to Python and I am absolutely stumped trying to figure
this out. I have searched plenty, but I am either searching for the
wrong keywords or this isn't possible.
What I want to do is have one import be global for the entire package.
Here is an example...
package
Eloff wrote:
Almost every time I've had to do parsing of text over the last 5 years
I've needed this function:
def find_first(s, subs, start=None, end=None):
results = [s.find(sub, start, end) for sub in subs]
results = [r for r in results if r != -1]
if results:
Hey all,
I'm really new to Python and this may seem like a really dumb
question, but basically, I wrote a script to do the following, however
the processing time/memory usage is not what I'd like it to be. Any
suggestions?
Outline:
1. Read tab delim files from a directory, files are of 3 types:
On Fri, 2009-07-17 at 10:28 -0700, Phil wrote:
I'm really new to Python and I am absolutely stumped trying to figure
this out. I have searched plenty, but I am either searching for the
wrong keywords or this isn't possible.
What I want to do is have one import be global for the entire
Robert Kern wrote:
[sage advice snipped]
Don't waste half a day trying to figure out why your script
mysteriously doesn't work. Learn from my mistakes. :-)
I find that's the best type of mistake to learn from: other
people's ;-)
-tkc
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
I was wondering if I could get some suggestions on how to write a single
list of numbers to a .m file (for matlab) so that I can create a matlab
vector out of the list of numbers from my python program. I have been using
a csv writer to create .m files from lists of lists, but I'm not sure
LoD MoD wrote:
I am having trouble extending my option parsing.
Any help is appreciated:
import sys
import getopt
import time
def tail(file):
while 1:
where = file.tell()
line = file.readline()
if not line:
time.sleep(1)
file.seek(where)
On 7/17/2009 10:58 AM Zaki said...
snip
Now, I've tried running this and it takes much longer than I'd like. I
was wondering if there might be a better way to do things
Suppose, for the sake of argument, that you've written highly efficient
code. Then the processing time would already be
In this instance the trackback was somewhat unhelpful.There problem was
here:
file = open(filename, 'r')
should be
file = open(a, 'r')
args should be passed within the getopt riff
On Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 11:08 AM, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
LoD MoD wrote:
Wai Yip auror...@gmail.com wrote:
I started with ctypes because it is the battery included with the
Python standard library. My code is very fluid and I'm looking for
easy opportunity to optimize it. One example is to find the longest
common prefix among two strings. Right now I am
Thanks to both of you for the fast and detailed responses. I will just
treat the package for what it is, a namespace.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks to both of you for the fast and detailed responses. I will
just
use the package for what it is, a namespace.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks to both of you for the fast and detailed responses. I will just
use the package for what it is, a namespace.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Zaki wrote:
Hey all,
I'm really new to Python and this may seem like a really dumb
question, but basically, I wrote a script to do the following, however
the processing time/memory usage is not what I'd like it to be. Any
suggestions?
Outline:
1. Read tab delim files from a directory, files
I have a Python script getData.py that uses Mechanize, and runs fine
under the interpreter. It was installed using easy_install - and the
install seemed to indicate it was completed.
The problem is, when I try to compile it using py2exe while in the
folder of the script, and using the run
Wai Yip auror...@gmail.com wrote:
I started with ctypes because it is the battery included with the
Python standard library. My code is very fluid and I'm looking for
easy opportunity to optimize it. One example is to find the longest
common prefix among two strings. Right now I am comparing
In article mailman.2664.1246857607.8015.python-l...@python.org,
Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar wrote:
En Mon, 06 Jul 2009 00:28:43 -0300, Steven D'Aprano
st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au escribi?:
On Mon, 06 Jul 2009 14:32:46 +1200, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
I wonder how many
Hello,
Historically, I have used scripting languages like python for typical
uses, but they tend to not fare very well at system programming; for
close interfacing with the operating system, I'm often forced to use a
language like C. This is undesirable to me.
I do not think this has to be the
On Fri, 2009-07-17 at 20:53 +, Albert van der Horst wrote:
Because unlike in algol 68 in python whitespace is relevant,
we could get by with requiring whitespace:
x= -q # okay
ab and -ac and -b -d# okay
8 ** -2 # okay
On Jul 17, 2:49 pm, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
Zaki wrote:
Hey all,
I'm really new to Python and this may seem like a really dumb
question, but basically, I wrote a script to do the following, however
the processing time/memory usage is not what I'd like it to be. Any
1 - 100 of 206 matches
Mail list logo