much as we'd very much like to declare a 0.6 stable release, really
really soon and move forward, the ChangeLog just keeps growing (133
and counting) with the bugfixes, testing and contributions since
0.5p1.
pyjamas is a port of GWT to python, and includes a
python-to-javascript compiler and a
Hi all,
Version 0.13 of mpmath is now available from the website:
http://code.google.com/p/mpmath/
It can also be downloaded from the Python Package Index:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mpmath/0.13
Mpmath is a pure-Python library for arbitrary-precision floating-point
arithmetic that implements
On behalf of the Python development team, I'm pleased to announce the first
release candidate of Python 3.1.1.
This bug fix release fixes many normal bugs and several critical ones including
potential data corruption in the io library. The final version should be out
within the next week.
Call for proposals -- PyCon 2010 -- http://us.pycon.org/2010/
===
Due date: October 1st, 2009
Want to showcase your skills as a Python Hacker? Want to have
hundreds of people see your talk on the subject of your choice? Have some
hot
Hi,
I am using OptionParser, but I've not managed figure out a way to support
what I wanted command line format prog cmd [options] [arguments].
E.g., svn ls -r123 http://hello.world;. Can I do this using OptionParser?
Thanks.
--
Life is the only flaw in an otherwise perfect nonexistence
--
On Aug 13, 10:36 pm, Dr. Phillip M. Feldman pfeld...@verizon.net
wrote:
Actually, I've tried both of these, and I get (different) errors in both
cases:
In [1]: from mymath import *
In [2]: reload(mymath)
NameError: name 'mymath' is not defined
In [3]: reload('mymath')
TypeError: reload()
[David]
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that the datetime in start is always before the one in end?
class foo(object):
def __init__(self,a = None,b = None)
self.start =
On Aug 14, 12:52 am, David davig...@googlemail.com wrote:
Yes, I guess it would be more simple. Here is really what I am trying
to do. I simplified the functions, but the purpose is to write some
text in a local file every x seconds (here, I'm just writing the
timestamp, i.e. a string
I mainly develop on Linux these days, but if I ever end up doing
anything on windows I'll make sure to look at that.
On Aug 13, 6:56 pm, Elias Fotinis \(eliasf\) efoti...@y...@h00.com
wrote:
casebash wrote:
I've been wondering for a while if there exists an interactive
terminal which has
Hello everyone,
I get a (11, 'Resource temporarily unavailable') error when I try to
send a file using a socket. Is there s size limit? I tried sending a
smaller file and ii poses no problem. Am I doing something wrong? Here
is the code:
def sendMessage(host, port, msg):
if
Hello,
I think that this isn't possible with optparse library.
However, it's possible with argparse (http://code.google.com/p/argparse/):
http://argparse.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/other-methods.html#sub-commands
It's not a standard library, but it's worth to take a look at it.
Best
Hello Senad,
You might find this style guide useful too in your toolbox of
Python skills tricks.
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
This is a great and helpful group of people here, we are lucky to
have access to groups like this.
Best,
Esmail
--
Hello Senad,
You might find this style guide useful too in your toolbox of
Python skills tricks.
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
This is a great and helpful group of people here, we are lucky to
have access to groups like this.
Best,
Esmail
--
Thanks all! That was most helpful and informative.
Best,
Josiah
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi!
Pygresql, DB-API.
I search for a solution to get meta information about last query,
because I must export these infos to Delphi.
Delphi have TDataSet, and it have meta structure that must be defined
before I create it.
For char/varchar fields I must define their sizes!
Pygresql is not
Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
Hello everyone,
I get a (11, 'Resource temporarily unavailable') error when I try to
send a file using a socket. Is there s size limit? I tried sending a
smaller file and ii poses no problem. Am I doing something wrong? Here
is the code:
def sendMessage(host, port,
On Friday 14 August 2009 09:15:34 Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
Hello everyone,
I get a (11, 'Resource temporarily unavailable') error when I try to
send a file using a socket. Is there s size limit? I tried sending a
smaller file and ii poses no problem. Am I doing something wrong? Here
is the
On Friday 14 August 2009 09:47:50 Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
Gabriel Rossetti wrote:
8 --
Actually, the original code didn't have the sock.setblocking(0), the
problem I am trying to find is that the server does have
sock.setblocking(0) (I can't change
Senad Ibraimoski Of Belgrade:
Hello, I'm a new guy to this group, my professor recommend this group
to me, because I was boring him with questions.I'm new to python, and
I have problem plotting Quadratic Functions. Using module pygame.
Python is a tool you use to learn something else, but
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 13:49:19 +0900, Terry Reedy wrote:
Dr. Phillip M. Feldman wrote:
According to the Python documentation, 'reload' reloads a previously
imported module (so that changes made via an external editor will be
effective). But, when I try to use this command, I get the following
On Aug 13, 8:36 pm, goldtech goldt...@worldpost.com wrote:
Could you explain or link me to an explanation of this?
http://docs.python.org/tutorial/datastructures.html#more-on-conditions
Give the whole tutorial a good read.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In the past, on this group, I have made statements that said that on Linux,
the serial port handling somehow does not allow transmitting and receiving at
the same time, and nobody contradicted me.
I am running into the self same issue again.
What I normally do is to open the port like this:
Dr. Phillip M. Feldman wrote:
Actually, I've tried both of these, and I get (different) errors in both
cases:
In [1]: from mymath import *
In [2]: reload(mymath)
NameError: name 'mymath' is not defined
In [3]: reload('mymath')
TypeError: reload() argument must be module
Please don't top
En Fri, 14 Aug 2009 05:34:52 -0300, Steven D'Aprano
st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au escribió:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 13:49:19 +0900, Terry Reedy wrote:
Besides the other answers, do not use reload. It is removed in Py3
because it cannot be made to work as people reasonably expect.
That's
On Aug 14, 12:18 am, Javier Collado javier.coll...@gmail.com wrote:
2009/8/14 Steven Woody narkewo...@gmail.com:
Hi,
I am using OptionParser, but I've not managed figure out a way to support
what I wanted command line format prog cmd [options] [arguments].
E.g., svn ls
En Fri, 14 Aug 2009 03:22:49 -0300, Steven Woody narkewo...@gmail.com
escribió:
I am using OptionParser, but I've not managed figure out a way to support
what I wanted command line format prog cmd [options] [arguments].
E.g., svn ls -r123 http://hello.world;. Can I do this using
Emile van Sebille wrote:
On 8/13/2009 3:17 PM dippim said...
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that the datetime in start is always before the one in end?
class foo(object):
def
MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
Operation Result
|x or y| x if x else y
|x and y| y if x else x
|not x| False if x else False
:-)
That's not a terribly good definition for the 'not' operator. Try:
|not x| False if x else True
--
Duncan Booth
Hendrik van Rooyen schrieb:
In the past, on this group, I have made statements that said that on Linux,
the serial port handling somehow does not allow transmitting and receiving at
the same time, and nobody contradicted me.
I am running into the self same issue again.
What I normally do is
Sleepy Cabbage schrieb:
As the title says, I'm trying to find a way to get the pause status from
amarok 2.1.
I'm running kubuntu 9.04 with kde 4.2.2, python 2.6.2.
Thanks in advance.
Not at my linux-system right now, but dcop and the respective
python-module should help.
Diez
--
On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:26:54 -0700, PeteDK wrote:
Hi there
I'am working on a route comparison tool for carpools.
The route comparison is based on 'steps' retrieved from google maps
GDirection. These steps vary in length and i use the coordinates at the
beginning of each step. However,
Look up EXPLAIN
Thanks for the suggestion. I don't see any option to have EXPLAIN display
the query time though?
--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/Database-query-execution-times-in-Python--tp24870050p24969867.html
Sent from the Python - python-list mailing list archive
Dear Carl,
Your ideas are extremely good, and I liked idea 2 especially, based on
that I am considering following approach.
Eg: let us say I have module named myModule and exposing myModule.myAPI
So I will now rename myModule as _myModule and write a python layer with
myModule
So my python
Hi!
I'm using python-ldap to create some entries on my openldap server.
The problem is that some of those entries have accented characters and
unicode text in general.
I'm wondering if there is any example or documentation on how to add
or modify ldap objects whose values contains non-ascii
Scott David Daniels wrote:
MRAB wrote:
The shortest I can come up with is:
[ + ][.join(letters) + ]
Maybe a golf shot:
][.join(letters).join([])
Even shorter:
[+][.join(letters)+]
:-)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Matias wrote:
Hi!
I'm using python-ldap to create some entries on my openldap server.
The problem is that some of those entries have accented characters and
unicode text in general.
I'm wondering if there is any example or documentation on how to add
or modify ldap objects whose values
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
port = open(/dev/ttyS0,r+b,0)
What I would really like is to have two threads - one that does blocking input
waiting for a character, and one that examines an output queue and transmits
the stuff it finds.
You can't read and write with the same stdio file object
Hi,
I am trying to analyse some biological data from microarray experiments.
Different experiments have been stored in a SQL database.
One of the things I would like to do is to fetch all data from a certain
distance from gene ATGs say 100+/- bp and calculate the bp average over all
genes
trias:
One of the things I would like to do is to fetch all data from a certain
distance from gene ATGs say 100+/- bp and calculate the bp average over all
genes over this region.
I know absolutely nothing about your problem domain, but if your
distance function is metric, you can use
Terry Reedy wrote:
Dr. Phillip M. Feldman wrote:
According to the Python documentation, 'reload' reloads a previously
imported
module (so that changes made via an external editor will be
effective). But, when I try to use this command, I get the following
error message:
TypeError: reload()
On Aug 13, 1:15 pm, Alan G Isaac alan.is...@gmail.com wrote:
I do not understand the reason for your silly, sarcastic response.
On 8/13/2009 7:58 AM John Machin apparently wrote:
Duck typing: ask a silly question, get a silly answer.
Maybe if you learned to be a more generous reader,
fewer
On Aug 14, 5:45 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
Emile van Sebille wrote:
On 8/13/2009 3:17 PM dippim said...
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that the
On Friday 14 August 2009 12:54:32 Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
How about using pyserial? With that, I never had any problems accessing
the the serial ports, and AFAIK no duplex-problems as well. And I
seriously doubt that these are a python-related problem - python only
has a very thin, direct
dippim schrieb:
On Aug 14, 5:45 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
Emile van Sebille wrote:
On 8/13/2009 3:17 PM dippim said...
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain
On Friday 14 August 2009 14:13:46 greg wrote:
You can't read and write with the same stdio file object
at the same time. Odd things tend to happen if you try.
You need to open *two* file objects, one for reading
and one for writing:
fr = open(/dev/ttyS0,rb,0)
fw =
On Aug 14, 2:34 am, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
[David]
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that the datetime in start is always before the one in end?
class
On 01:38 pm, hend...@microcorp.co.za wrote:
On Friday 14 August 2009 12:54:32 Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
How about using pyserial? With that, I never had any problems
accessing
the the serial ports, and AFAIK no duplex-problems as well. And I
seriously doubt that these are a python-related
MRAB wrote:
Gary Herron wrote:
goldtech wrote:
Could you explain or link me to an explanation of this? Been using
Python for a while but not sure I understand what's happening below.
Thanks.
ss=1 and f
ss
'f'
ss=0 and f
ss
0
Python's Boolean
Hendrik van Rooyen schrieb:
On Friday 14 August 2009 14:13:46 greg wrote:
You can't read and write with the same stdio file object
at the same time. Odd things tend to happen if you try.
You need to open *two* file objects, one for reading
and one for writing:
fr = open(/dev/ttyS0,rb,0)
In article 6e13754c-1fa6-4d1b-8861-146bffec8...@h30g2000vbr.googlegroups.com,
Douglas Alan darkwate...@gmail.com wrote:
My friend begs to differ with the above. It would be much better for
debugging if Python generated a parsing error for unrecognized escape
sequences, rather than leaving them
On 2009-08-14, Martin v. L?wis mar...@v.loewis.de wrote:
I'm guessing I need to configure cvs to copy files to both
locations whenever I commit. Does that sound right? Is there a
better way I'm not thinking of?
Just use one set of source files.
If the set of files doesn't change too often,
On 2009-08-14, Gabriel Rossetti gabriel.rosse...@arimaz.com wrote:
I get a (11, 'Resource temporarily unavailable') error when I
try to send a file using a socket. Is there s size limit?
No, there's no size limit. However, there is a bandwidth
limit. You can't shove bytes into the pipe
On 2009-08-14, Hendrik van Rooyen hend...@microcorp.co.za wrote:
In the past, on this group, I have made statements that said
that on Linux, the serial port handling somehow does not allow
transmitting and receiving at the same time,
That's not true. Linux/Unix does and always has supported
On 2009-08-14, Hendrik van Rooyen hend...@microcorp.co.za wrote:
In the meantime I have had another idea which I have also not tried yet,
namely to do independent opens for reading and writing, to give me two file
instances instead of one, and to try with that. I have no idea if it would
On 2009-08-14, exar...@twistedmatrix.com exar...@twistedmatrix.com wrote:
One strategy you might employ to get rid of the busy looping
is to use Twisted and its serial port support. This also
addresses the full- duplex issue you've raised.
There are no such full-dulex issues.
--
Grant
Martin P. Hellwig martin.hell...@dcuktec.org writes:
Sounds like a bad case of STRIS
http://blog.dcuktec.com/2009/08/stris.html
I believe the correct technical term for it is potty mouth.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2009-08-14, greg g...@cosc.canterbury.ac.nz wrote:
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
port = open(/dev/ttyS0,r+b,0)
What I would really like is to have two threads - one that
does blocking input waiting for a character, and one that
examines an output queue and transmits the stuff it finds.
On 02:19 pm, inva...@invalid wrote:
On 2009-08-14, exar...@twistedmatrix.com exar...@twistedmatrix.com
wrote:
One strategy you might employ to get rid of the busy looping
is to use Twisted and its serial port support. This also
addresses the full- duplex issue you've raised.
There are no
dippim wrote:
On Aug 14, 2:34 am, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
[David]
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that the datetime in start is always before the one in
Grant Edwards wrote:
On 2009-08-14, Martin v. L?wis mar...@v.loewis.de wrote:
I'm guessing I need to configure cvs to copy files to both
locations whenever I commit. Does that sound right? Is there a
better way I'm not thinking of?
Just use one set of source files.
If the set
MRAB wrote:
Scott David Daniels wrote:
MRAB wrote:
The shortest I can come up with is:
[ + ][.join(letters) + ]
Maybe a golf shot:
][.join(letters).join([])
Even shorter:
[+][.join(letters)+]
:-)
I was going by PEP8 rules. ;-)
--Scott David Daniels
Scott David
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual class)
that will raise an exception only if called without being overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of the
instance calling the method has defined that method as well.
Example:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 09:23:17 -0400, Colin J. Williams wrote:
It's typically a user module that needs to be reloaded.
What's a user module?
It seems that del sys.modules['moduleName'] has no effect.
sys.modules is just a dictionary, I find it hard to believe that deleting
from it has no
On Aug 14, 2009, at 12:09 AM, Scott David Daniels wrote:
Charles Yeomans wrote:
On Aug 11, 2009, at 3:30 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
Ethan Furman wrote:
Greetings!
I have seen posts about the assert statement and PbC (or maybe it
was DbC), and I just took a very brief look at pycontract
On Aug 14, 10:48 am, Dave Angel da...@ieee.org wrote:
dippim wrote:
On Aug 14, 2:34 am, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
[David]
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that
On Aug 14, 10:48 am, Dave Angel da...@ieee.org wrote:
dippim wrote:
On Aug 14, 2:34 am, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
[David]
I am new to Python and I have a question about descriptors. If I have
a class as written below, is there a way to use descriptors to be
certain that
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual class)
that will raise an exception only if called without being overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of the
instance calling the method has defined
Jean-Michel Pichavant schrieb:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual class)
that will raise an exception only if called without being overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of the
instance calling the method has defined
`lst` is a nested list
`tpl` is the indexes for an item in the list
What is the nice way to retrieve the item?
(Speedy access is nice.)
I don't want to use NumPy, but I'd like somehow
to avoid an explicit loop. I did consider using
eval. E.g., eval('lst' + '[%d]'*len(tpl)%tpl).
It works but
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 16:49:47 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual class)
that will raise an exception only if called without being overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of the
Hi
This way the first time I did something with ftp stuff. I think that
generally it works but it stops working(quits or disappears) after
couple of hours of running.
This was a personal test-trial script for my own needs which was to
get my dynamic ip and broadcast to a client(I have a client
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 07:07:31 -0700, Aahz wrote:
I saw `cout' being shifted Hello world times to the left and stopped
right there. --Steve Gonedes
Assuming that's something real, and not invented for humour, I presume
that's describing something possible in C++. Am I correct? What the hell
kk schrieb:
Hi
This way the first time I did something with ftp stuff. I think that
generally it works but it stops working(quits or disappears) after
couple of hours of running.
This was a personal test-trial script for my own needs which was to
get my dynamic ip and broadcast to a client(I
Hi Diez
Thanks for your insight. The reason I chose the awkward method to
parse the ip digits is that I was not familiar with the regex module
and the Dyndns Ip page is pretty simple page. I guess it is time to
learn more about the Re module.
As far as robustness, I agree with your assestment. I
On 2009-08-14, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 07:07:31 -0700, Aahz wrote:
I saw `cout' being shifted Hello world times to the left and stopped
right there. --Steve Gonedes
Assuming that's something real, and not invented for humour, I presume
On 14 Ago, 18:03, kk maymunbe...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
This way the first time I did something with ftp stuff. I think that
generally it works but it stops working(quits or disappears) after
couple of hours of running.
This was a personal test-trial script for my own needs which was to
get my
Hi,
Can somebody please provide me link to a good online resource or e-
book for doing natural language processing programming in Python.
Thanks,
Prateek
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
kk schrieb:
Hi Diez
Thanks for your insight. The reason I chose the awkward method to
parse the ip digits is that I was not familiar with the regex module
and the Dyndns Ip page is pretty simple page. I guess it is time to
learn more about the Re module.
As far as robustness, I agree with your
Grant Edwards wrote:
On 2009-08-14, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 07:07:31 -0700, Aahz wrote:
I saw `cout' being shifted Hello world times to the left and stopped
right there. --Steve Gonedes
Assuming that's something real, and not invented
On Aug 14, 12:17 pm, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid wrote:
On 2009-08-14, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 07:07:31 -0700, Aahz wrote:
I saw `cout' being shifted Hello world times to the left and stopped
right there. --Steve Gonedes
MRAB wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual
class) that will raise an exception only if called without being
overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of the
instance calling the method
Asanka Wasala wrote:
Hi
I am developing a spell checker for my language, and I came across
solving an interesing problem. It would be great if you can suggest
me an optimized solution for the problem described below:
I have certain group of letters like these:
Group #1: c,r,b
Group #2: a,z,k
Jean-Michel Pichavant schrieb:
MRAB wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual
class) that will raise an exception only if called without being
overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm checking that the class of
Hi
I am developing a spell checker for my language, and I came across
solving an interesing problem. It would be great if you can suggest
me an optimized solution for the problem described below:
I have certain group of letters like these:
Group #1: c,r,b
Group #2: a,z,k
Group #3: h,t
.
.
--- On Sat, 8/8/09, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
From: Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de
Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] expy: an expressway to extend Python
To: python-...@python.org
Date: Saturday, August 8, 2009, 4:55 PM
More details at http://expy.sourceforge.net/
I'm clearly
On Aug 14, 4:36 am, Xah Lee xah...@gmail.com wrote:
• A Exhibition Of Tech Geekers Incompetence: Emacs whitespace-mode
http://xahlee.org/UnixResource_dir/writ/emacs_whitespace-mode_problem...
Instead of writing a completely useless article you could had asked
for help in an emacs newsgroup, or
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:54:54 +, Alan G Isaac wrote:
`lst` is a nested list
`tpl` is the indexes for an item in the list
What is the nice way to retrieve the item? (Speedy access is nice.)
Assuming you want to do this frequently, write a helper function, then
use it:
# Untested
def
Alan G Isaac wrote:
On 8/13/2009 7:58 AM John Machin apparently wrote:
Duck typing: ask a silly question, get a silly answer.
Maybe if you learned to be a more generous reader,
fewer questions would look silly to you.
If you take a look at the crap that John very patiently wades through on
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 09:23:17 -0400, Colin J. Williams wrote:
It's typically a user module that needs to be reloaded.
What's a user module?
A module written by a user, as distinguished from a libary
It seems that del sys.modules['moduleName'] has no effect.
Aahz wrote:
Sorry, I mostly have been working on our Mac port, so I'm not sure what's
needed to make this work on Windows. Did you try downloading the PyCurl
binary? Maybe it statically links libcurl on Windows.
Shame it's not available as a bdist_egg, that's what I'm really after...
What
On Aug 14, 8:25 pm, fortunatus daniel.elia...@excite.com wrote:
On Aug 14, 1:01 pm, vippstar vipps...@gmail.com wrote:
Why would you fill your website with junk?
The OP made it clear:
Just wanted to express some frustration with whitespace-mode.
You took my question out of context and
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant schrieb:
MRAB wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Hi fellows,
Does anyone know a way to write virtual methods (in one virtual
class) that will raise an exception only if called without being
overridden ?
Currently in the virtual method I'm
vippstar wrote:
On Aug 14, 8:25 pm, fortunatus daniel.elia...@excite.com wrote:
On Aug 14, 1:01 pm, vippstar vipps...@gmail.com wrote:
Why would you fill your website with junk?
The OP made it clear:
Just wanted to express some frustration with whitespace-mode.
I think I've spent enough time on this discussion, so I won't be directly
responding to any of your recent points -- it's clear that I'm not
persuading you that there's any justification for any behaviour for
escape sequences other than the way C++ deals with them. That's your
prerogative, of
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:54:54 +, Alan G Isaac wrote:
`lst` is a nested list
`tpl` is the indexes for an item in the list
What is the nice way to retrieve the item? (Speedy access is nice.)
Assuming you want to do this frequently, write a helper function, then
On 8/14/2009 1:09 PM Steven D'Aprano apparently wrote:
Try this instead:
from operator import getitem
reduce(getitem, (2, 1, 0), lst)
'aaa'
reduce(getitem, (2, 1, 0, 0), lst)
'a'
operator.getitem is less ugly too.
Yes, that's better.
Thanks,
Alan
--
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 13:14:16 -0400, Colin J. Williams wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 09:23:17 -0400, Colin J. Williams wrote:
It's typically a user module that needs to be reloaded.
What's a user module?
A module written by a user, as distinguished from a libary
You
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Your solution will work, for sure. The problem is that it will dumb down
the Base class interface, multiplying the number of methods by 2. This
would not be an issue in many cases, in mine there's already too much
meaningful methods in my class for me to add
Probably this isn't news to anyone but me, but just in case:
Last I heard Komodo was a very highly regarded IDE that unfortunately
cost money. Yesterday I discovered that they now have an editor
available for free.
Doesn't contain all the features of the IDE, but just having glanced
at it it
On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 18:49:26 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Sorry guys (means guys *and* gals :op ), I realized I've not been able
to describe precisely what I want to do. I'd like the base class to be
virtual (aka abstract). However it may be abstract but it does not mean
it cannot do
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