Dear friends,
I have several 2 column file which i need to plot in one figure.
I generally do it using gnuplot, but when there is several files, its
hard to do manually.
can you tell me how i can load a file in python and plot several file
in one figure(as it is done via replot in gnuplot)?
I am
On 2010-07-10, rudra wrote:
> Dear friends,
> I have several 2 column file which i need to plot in one figure.
> I generally do it using gnuplot, but when there is several files, its
> hard to do manually.
> can you tell me how i can load a file in python and plot several file
> in one figure(as
I think I am trying to open a can of worms. It's better to leave the
idea for now.
Prashant
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 9 Jul 2010 16:49:20 + (UTC) Grant Edwards
wrote:
> On 2010-07-09, Dani Valverde wrote:
>
> > I am new to python and pretty new to programming (I have some
> > expertise wit R statistical programming language). I am just
> > starting, so my questions may be a little bit stupid. Can a
On 9 Jul., 18:31, Dani Valverde wrote:
> Hello!
> I am new to python and pretty new to programming (I have some expertise
> wit R statistical programming language). I am just starting, so my
> questions may be a little bit stupid. Can anyone suggest a good editor
> for python?
> Cheers!
>
> Dani
>
On Jul 10, 1:13 pm, Tim Harig wrote:
> It would really help to see a representative sample of the data that you
> are working with and what you want the plot to look like.
The data looks something like that:
0.70711 -2.57266
1.0 0.16694
1.22474 -0.15287
1.41421 0.28025
1.58114 -0.03806
1.7320
geremy condra wrote:
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dani Valverde wrote:
Sorry, I forgot to mention that I am using Linux. In fact, my first test
have been with gedit. Is there any way to directly run the Python code into
the console?
Gedit has a plugin that brings up a python intepr
On Sat, Jul 10, 2010 at 6:49 AM, Dani Valverde wrote:
> geremy condra wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dani Valverde
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Sorry, I forgot to mention that I am using Linux. In fact, my first test
>>> have been with gedit. Is there any way to directly run the Python code
geremy condra wrote:
On Sat, Jul 10, 2010 at 6:49 AM, Dani Valverde wrote:
geremy condra wrote:
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dani Valverde
wrote:
Sorry, I forgot to mention that I am using Linux. In fact, my first test
have been with gedit. Is there any way to directly run
On 10/07/2010 13:05, Dani Valverde wrote:
It could be a solution. But I am used to work with gEdit using the R
statistical programming language plugin, and I am able to send the code
to console instead of typing it in.
To run your code, save it to a file 'mycode.py' (or whatever), then open
a co
On Jul 10, 8:49 pm, Dani Valverde wrote:
> geremy condra wrote:
> > On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dani Valverde
> > wrote:
>
> >> Sorry, I forgot to mention that I am using Linux. In fact, my first test
> >> have been with gedit. Is there any way to directly run the Python code into
> >> the c
On Sat, Jul 10, 2010 at 7:05 AM, Dani Valverde wrote:
> geremy condra wrote:
>>
>> On Sat, Jul 10, 2010 at 6:49 AM, Dani Valverde
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> geremy condra wrote:
>>>
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Dani Valverde
wrote:
>
> Sorry, I forgot to mention tha
All,
I have been finding python.org site very slow for the last year and
probably before. Is there any known reason why the site is slow? I
tried accessing it from several locations and I always get to wait
several seconds for a page to load (in any browser/OS).
Thanks
-- Pierre
--
http://mail
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 06:30:11 -0700 (PDT)
Pierre Rouleau wrote:
> All,
>
> I have been finding python.org site very slow for the last year and
> probably before. Is there any known reason why the site is slow?
For the last year??
It's been mostly zippy here.
Is IPv6 enabled on your computer? If s
On Jul 10, 9:48 am, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
> On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 06:30:11 -0700 (PDT)
>
> > I have been finding python.org site very slow for the last year and
> > probably before. Is there any known reason why the site is slow?
>
> For the last year??
> It's been mostly zippy here.
> Is IPv6 enab
> For the last year??
> It's been mostly zippy here.
> Is IPv6 enabled on your computer? If so, I'd try to disable it.
> python.org domains resolve to both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and, if your
> computer has IPv6 enabled but you don't have any IPv6 connectivity,
> this can result in slowdowns.
Tha
> I did disable IPv6 on my computer at home and it did speed it up. I'll
> check the other computers where I experienced the same slowness.
Of course, it would be interesting to find out what precisely went
wrong. If you are curious to find out, let me know, and I'll help
investigating.
Regards,
Sorry I have searched related topic but none could point out this
problem.
I am currently using python 3.1.2:
>>>Python 3.1.2 (r312:79147, Jun 30 2010, 11:58:11)
>>>[GCC 4.2.1 20070719 [FreeBSD]] on freebsd8
And for the following three simple lines of code, borrowed from
official python-doc 3.1
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 16:03:24 +0200
"Martin v. Loewis" wrote:
>
> That is a common myth. If your computer doesn't have any IPv6
> connectivity, all is fine. The web browser will fallback to IPv4
> immediately (*), without sending out any IPv6 datagrams first.
Ok, I suppose the explanation wasn't
>> If your computer does have IPv6 connectivity, but it's broken
>> (i.e. you have a gateway, but eventually packets are discarded),
>> you see the IPv4 fallback after the IPv6 timeout. The IPv4 connection in
>> itself then would be fast.
>
> I think it's what most users experience when they are t
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 16:28:19 +0200
"Martin v. Loewis" wrote:
> >> If your computer does have IPv6 connectivity, but it's broken
> >> (i.e. you have a gateway, but eventually packets are discarded),
> >> you see the IPv4 fallback after the IPv6 timeout. The IPv4 connection in
> >> itself then would
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 19:31, Dani Valverde wrote:
> Hello!
> I am new to python and pretty new to programming (I have some expertise wit
> R statistical programming language). I am just starting, so my questions may
> be a little bit stupid. Can anyone suggest a good editor for python?
> Cheers!
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 07:06:47 -0700, pcchen wrote:
> And for the following three simple lines of code, borrowed from official
> python-doc 3.1.2:
>
from urllib.request import urlopen
response = urlopen('http://python.org/') html = response.read()
>
> They could cause this error:
>
> Fi
Thank You Steve,
I am not using the urllib. I am using the xmlrpc and http modules from the
python library.
Please see the header code for the modules I am including..
from xmlrpc import client
import pprint
class ClientCertTransport(client.Transport):
def make_connection(self,host):
import
Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages. Can
you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in html
like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding correct
encoding?
Thanks,
Mattia
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Speaking on the issue for the first time, Chaudhuri, over the phone
from New York, says, "They were completely distorted reports. We are
really good friends for more details www.bollywood789.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jul 10, 2010, at 09:24 , mattia wrote:
> Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages. Can
> you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in html
> like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding correct
> encoding?
It won't do the whole job for you but you
mattia wrote:
Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages. Can
you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in html
like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding correct
encoding?
import re
from html.entities import entitydefs
# The downloaded web page w
Hi.
I built the [xxmodule.c] from the source distribution, as suggested by the
Python 3.1.1 docs. I named this [xx.pyd], as I believed the module name was just
"xx". Indeed importing xx works fine, but when I do help(xx) I get ...
>>> help( xx )
Help on module xx:
NAME
Les Schaffer a écrit :
> i have been asked to guarantee that a proposed Python application will
> run continuously under MS Windows for two months time. And i am looking
> to know what i don't know.
(snip)
> but none of this has anything to do with Python itself. i am sure python
> servers have b
Hi,
I'm using MYSQLdb
and have following code
db = MySQLdb.connect(**cfg)
c = db.cursor()
qrystr = "insert mytable set id = %s , other_field = %s"
c.execute(qrystr, (id_val,other_field_val) )
What I wondered is whether there is any way to print the 'filled in'
query string for debuggin.
Th
Gilles Ganault a écrit :
> Hello
>
> I'd like to write a small web app in Python which must include a
> forum.
>
> So I checked the relevant article in Wikipedia, which says that only
> one forum app is available for Python:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_internet_forum_software_
Hi,
I'd like to debug a small wsgi module.
I run it either on an apache web server
or locally via wsgiref.simple_server.make_server
and following code snippet:
from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
httpd = make_server('localhost',8012,application)
while True:
httpd.handle_request()
On 7/9/2010 12:13 PM, Les Schaffer wrote:
i have been asked to guarantee that a proposed Python application will
run continuously under MS Windows for two months time. And i am looking
to know what i don't know.
The app would read instrument data from a serial port,
If the device you're lis
* John Nagle, on 10.07.2010 20:54:
On 7/9/2010 12:13 PM, Les Schaffer wrote:
i have been asked to guarantee that a proposed Python application will
run continuously under MS Windows for two months time. And i am looking
to know what i don't know.
The app would read instrument data from a serial
On Jul 10, 2:42 pm, Gelonida wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to debug a small wsgi module.
>
> I run it either on an apache web server
>
> or locally via wsgiref.simple_server.make_server
> and following code snippet:
>
> from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server
> httpd = make_server('localhost',80
Dave Angel wrote:
>Tim Roberts wrote:
>>
>> No. The multi-thread-aware CRT in Visual C++ (which is the only option
>> since VS2008) puts errno in thread-local storage, so it's shared by all
>> CRTs.
>>
>I didn't know specifically that errno is in TLS, but I will disagree
>with the conclusion
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 20:22:21 +0200, News123 declaimed
the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
Hi,
I'm using MYSQLdb
What I wondered is whether there is any way to print the 'filled in'
query string for debuggin.
Just edit the MySQLdb cursors m
Sumatra looks like an interesting project
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Sumatra/0.2
But I have some questions. Is there any mail list or forum? I can't find
anything on the website.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article ,
Neal Becker wrote:
>
>Sumatra looks like an interesting project
>http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Sumatra/0.2
And how are we supposed to know that it's interesting? You should
provide a summary.
Also, it's pretty rude to set followups to gmane.comp.python.general
--
Aahz (a...@python
Il Sat, 10 Jul 2010 18:09:12 +0100, MRAB ha scritto:
> mattia wrote:
>> Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages.
>> Can you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in
>> html like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding
>> correct encoding?
>>
> import r
> Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages. Can
> you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in html
> like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding correct
> encoding?
I think the html parser of LXML can convert the entities, too.
Christian
--
http:
On 7/10/2010 2:03 PM, mattia wrote:
Il Sat, 10 Jul 2010 18:09:12 +0100, MRAB ha scritto:
mattia wrote:
Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages.
Can you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in
html like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding
correc
On 10 Jul 2010 13:48:09 -0700
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
>
> Also, it's pretty rude to set followups to gmane.comp.python.general
Can you expand?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 10Jul2010 09:11, pavan kumar maddali wrote:
| Thank You Steve,
| I am not using the urllib.
Your example did:
from urllib.request import urlopen
response = urlopen('http://python.org/') html =
response.read()
| I am using the xmlrpc and http modules from the
| python library.
[.
>
> It is possible that the way Linux (or some Linux setups: many of the
> recipes above are for Ubuntu, I use Mandriva myself) handles IPv6
> "connectivity" is suboptimal in some cases, and that connection
> attempts don't fail immediately when they should. I don't have enough
> knowledge to diag
Il Sat, 10 Jul 2010 16:24:23 +, mattia ha scritto:
> Hi all, I'm using py3k and the urllib package to download web pages. Can
> you suggest me a package that can translate reserved characters in html
> like "è", "ò", "é" in the corresponding correct
> encoding?
>
> Thanks,
> Mattia
Basically
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>I develop in an IDLE window.
>
>Module M says 'from service import *'.
>Next I correct a mistake in function 'service.f'.
>Now 'service.f' works fine.
>
>I do 'reload (service); reload (M)'.
>The function 'M.f' still misbehaves.
>
>'print inspect.getsource (service.f)' a
News123 wrote:
>
>I'm using MYSQLdb
>
>and have following code
>
>db = MySQLdb.connect(**cfg)
>c = db.cursor()
>qrystr = "insert mytable set id = %s , other_field = %s"
>c.execute(qrystr, (id_val,other_field_val) )
>
>What I wondered is whether there is any way to print the 'filled in'
>query str
Hi everybody,
im Roberts wrote:
> News123 wrote:
>> I'm using MYSQLdb
>>
>> and have following code
>>
>> db = MySQLdb.connect(**cfg)
>> c = db.cursor()
>> qrystr = "insert mytable set id = %s , other_field = %s"
>> c.execute(qrystr, (id_val,other_field_val) )
>>
>> What I wondered is whether t
On 7 jul, 08:38, Johan Grönqvist wrote:
> 2010-07-06 19:18, Ritchy lelis skrev:
>
> > On 6 jul, 17:29, Alan G Isaac wrote:
> >> Unfortunately I cannot make sense of the code you posted.
> >> Provide a detailed description in words (or psuedocode)
> >> of what you are trying to accomplish. Be ver
On 10 Jul, 02:23, Tim Chase wrote:
> While I'm not sure how much of Roy's comment was "hah, hah, just
> serious", this has been my biggest issue with long-running Python
> processes on Win32 -- either power outages the UPS can't handle,
> or (more frequently) the updates
Win32 is also the only O
On 9 Jul, 02:02, Neil Hodgson wrote:
> If you break the rules by using malloc rather than IMalloc for memory
> that is deallocated by a different component to that which allocated it
> or try to pass around FILE* objects then you will see failures.
Yes, the CRT issue applies to COM as well. C
In article ,
Antoine Pitrou wrote:
>On 10 Jul 2010 13:48:09 -0700
>a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote:
>>
>> Also, it's pretty rude to set followups to gmane.comp.python.general
>
>Can you expand?
If you look at the original post's headers, you'll see
Followup-To: gmane.comp.python.general
whi
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 5:54 AM, Stopp, Bryan wrote:
> I checked, none of the files are symlinks. The install process never got
> to the point where it created sym-links for libraries (if it even does,
> I haven't gotten to that point in the install process.)
>
> -B
>
> -Original Message-
>
On 10/07/2010 22:08, Neal Becker wrote:
Sumatra looks like an interesting project
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Sumatra/0.2
But I have some questions. Is there any mail list or forum? I can't find
anything on the website.
It's part of Neural Ensemble which has a google group (not specifically
source at:
http://github.com/lkcl/grailbrowser
$ python grail.py (note the lack of "python1.5" or "python2.4")
conversion of the 80 or so regex's to re has been carried out.
entirely successfully or not is a matter yet to be determined. always
a hoot to try browsing http://www.bbc.co.uk or http:
Let me tell you folks about a recent case of culo rojo i experianced
whilst creating a customized bin packer with Python. First i want to
say that i actually like the fact that i can do this..
py> a = []
py> if a:
... do something
Instead of this
py> if len(a) > 0:
... do something
Ok b
On Jul 10, 10:59 pm, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
wrote:
> source at:http://github.com/lkcl/grailbrowser
>
> $ python grail.py (note the lack of "python1.5" or "python2.4")
>
> conversion of the 80 or so regex's to re has been carried out.
> entirely successfully or not is a matter yet to be deter
On 7/10/10 10:38 PM, rantingrick wrote:
> Seems kinda dumb to build a tuple just so a conditional wont blow
> chunks! This integer bool-ing need to be fixed right away!
Yes, let us penalize the thousands of use cases where 0 being false is
useful and good, for the benefit of the one use-case (inde
On Jul 11, 12:51 am, Stephen Hansen wrote:
> You don't need to build a tuple. Just change the tests, to "if
> choiceIdx1 is not None". Its a little more work, sure. But its not
> enough that its even vaguely worth breaking the otherwise very useful
> behavior of bool(0) == False.
Hmm, i beg to
On 7/10/10 11:03 PM, rantingrick wrote:
> On Jul 11, 12:51 am, Stephen Hansen wrote:
>
>> You don't need to build a tuple. Just change the tests, to "if
>> choiceIdx1 is not None". Its a little more work, sure. But its not
>> enough that its even vaguely worth breaking the otherwise very useful
>
On Jul 11, 1:22 am, Stephen Hansen wrote:
> If you are so desperately concerned with space, then simply do:
>
> if (choiceIdx1, choiceIdx2) != (None, None):
>
> Its only eleven characters longer.
>
> Or, you can do:
>
> if None not in (choiceIdx1, choiceIdx2):
Only the first example was
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