On 07/13/2010 02:18 PM, Adam Mercer wrote:
I'm trying to build M2Crypto on Mac OS X 10.6.4 against python2.5
(python2.6 fails in the same way), with SWIG 2.0.0 and OpenSSL 1.0.0a
and it is failing with the following:
That version of M2Crypto does not work with OpenSSL 1.0.x because
OpenSSL cha
On Jul 11, 10:27 am, Xah Lee wrote:
>
> you are a victum of the Microsoft hatred. A hatred spread by, Richard
> M Stallman, and much of the unix people (although we should remember
> that Richard Stallman hated unix, if not more thanMicrosoft, and
> thehatredof unix was a major reason he started G
On Jul 16, 12:15 am, nanothermite911fbibustards
wrote:
> On Jul 11, 10:27 am, Xah Lee wrote:
>
>
>
> > you are a victum of the Microsoft hatred. A hatred spread by, Richard
> > M Stallman, and much of the unix people (although we should remember
> > that Richard Stallman hated unix, if not more t
CONVICTED RAPIST, ROMAN POLANSKY is RELEASED by a KANGAROO court in
Switzerland
We all know that Germans are paying a big tribute to the polanskys and
the swiss paid for the gold in the teeth.
Israeli Professor:
'We Could Destroy All European Capitals'
By Nadim Ladki
2-6-3
(IAP News) -- A
On Jul 16, 4:08 am, MRAB wrote:
> mukesh tiwari wrote:
> > Hello all
> > Currently i am trying to develop a client and server in python. Client
> > takes screenshot in every 20 seconds and send it to server. Server
> > store the received file in folder. Here is code for Client
>
> > import sys
> >
On Jul 15, 7:58 pm, Karsten Wutzke wrote:
> Hello,
>
> this is obviously a Python OO question:
>
> Since Python isn't stringly typed, single-dispatch isn't available per
> se. So is the "double-dispatch" Visitor pattern, which is usually used
> in OO systems to implement code generators. So, what
Self-Study Course : The Conversion of KHAZARS to Jews and thence
TRANSFORMATION to ZIONIST ATHEISTS
First, we will present the TRANSFORMATION, using HIGHLY AUTHENTIC
source . Lying and Deception is the second nature of zionists , so we
cant contaminate ourselves with an iota of it. We present evi
The Kitab al Khazari, an Arabic phrase meaning Book of the Khazars, is
one of most famous works of the medieval Spanish Jewish philosopher
and poet Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, completed around 1140.[1] Divided into
five essays ("ma'amarim," Articles), it takes the form of a dialogue
between the pagan
The Kitab al Khazari, an Arabic phrase meaning Book of the Khazars, is
one of most famous works of the medieval Spanish Jewish philosopher
and poet Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, completed around 1140.[1] Divided into
five essays ("ma'amarim," Articles), it takes the form of a dialogue
between the pagan
On 7/13/2010 7:43 PM, Xah Lee wrote:
I use comp.lang.lisp, comp.emacs since about 1999. Have been using
them pretty much on a weekly basis in the past 10 years. Starting
about 2007, the traffic has been increasingly filled with spam, and
the posters are always just the 20 or 30 known faces. I t
On 15 July, 23:21, bolega wrote:
> http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/stallman-kth.html
>
> RMS lecture at KTH (Sweden), 30 October 1986
>
> (Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (Royal Institute of Technology))
> Stockholm, Sweden
>
> Arranged by the student society
> “Datorföreningen Stacken”
> 30 October 198
Carl Banks, 16.07.2010 07:50:
On Jul 15, 8:33 pm, Stefan Behnel wrote:
The code I referenced is from the Cython compiler, and we use it to "do
stuff" with the AST. The visitor pattern is actually a pretty common way to
bind code in a single place that does a certain thing to different parts of
a
Karsten Wutzke wrote:
Yes, typo, I meant strictly.
Damn, I mean strongly. At least not for identifying which methods to
call depending on the type/s.
Karsten
Stringly is the perfect combination of strictly and strongly. Nice one :)
JM
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pytho
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 12:37 PM, Sparky wrote:
> Hello Python community!
>
> I am building a JSON-RPC web application that uses quite a few models.
> I would like to return JSON encoded object information and I need a
> system to indicate which properties should be returned when the object
> is t
> def to_JSON(self):
> returnDict = {}
> for member in filter(someMethod, inspect.getmembers(self)):
> returnDict[member[0]] = member[1]
> return json.dumps(returnDict)
By the way you don't need filter here. The getmembers() function has a
filter functions. It's cal
On Fri, 2010-07-16 at 01:26 -0400, pyt...@bdurham.com wrote:
> I understand what you're saying, but I'm struggling with how to
> represent the following strings in doctest code and doctest results.
> No
> matter what combination of backslashes or raw strings I use, I am
> unable
> to find a way to
On 14 jul, 14:51, Mladen Gogala wrote:
> On Wed, 14 Jul 2010 05:14:08 -0700, micayael wrote:
> > Thanks Thomas.
> > :-( then adodb today dosn't work with postgres (at least on ubuntu)
> > right?
>
> No, ADOdb doesn't work with the newer versions of Postgres. ADOdb doesn't
> work with Psycopg2 and
On Jul 15, 10:34 pm, Peter wrote:
> On Jul 16, 2:45 am, kj wrote:
>
> > This is a question _for Emacs users_ (the rest of you, go away :) ).
>
> > How do you do Python code-folding in Emacs?
>
> > Thanks!
>
> > ~K
>
[...]
> Anybody else now of any better ideas or whatever? Now that I think
> abo
On Jul 15, 7:07 pm, "D'Arcy J.M. Cain" wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Jul 2010 09:50:57 -0700 (PDT)
>
> G F wrote:
> > Does anyone have any ideas where the trouble is and what can be done
> > about it? The little bit about:
> > "reply: retcode (557); Msg: This mail server does not accept mail
> > addressed
I am having problems with running copy.deepcopy on very large data
structures containing lots of numeric data:
1. copy.deepcopy can be very slow
2. copy.deepcopy can cause memory errors even when I have plenty of
memory
I think the problem is that the current implementation keeps a memo
for e
Inquisitive Scientist, 16.07.2010 14:45:
I am having problems with running copy.deepcopy on very large data
structures containing lots of numeric data:
1. copy.deepcopy can be very slow
2. copy.deepcopy can cause memory errors even when I have plenty of
memory
I think the problem is that
On 16 July, 09:24, Mark Tarver wrote:
> On 15 July, 23:21, bolega wrote:
>
> >http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/stallman-kth.html
>
> > RMS lecture at KTH (Sweden), 30 October 1986
did you really have to post all of this...
> > read more »...
...oh sorry only about a third of it...
> Perhaps as
thanks to all for the replies.
the Windows memory fragmentation was one of the "i didn't know that"
items. we will use 64-bit Windows OS if the job happens.
agree with all the other suggestions: multiple threads for data and GUI,
etc. Also, might push for Linux even though the company is Wind
Hi;
I have the following code:
cursor.execute('select MyTable from optionsDetails where Store=%s',
(store,))
options_tables = [item[0] for item in cursor]
for table in options_tables:
cursor.execute('select * from %' % table)
You can already see what my question is. One of y'all
Les Schaffer, 16.07.2010 15:07:
agree with all the other suggestions: multiple threads for data and GUI,
The way I read it, the suggestion was to use separate processes, not
multiple threads. That's a pretty important difference.
Stefan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 15 Jul, 18:45, kj wrote:
> This is a question _for Emacs users_ (the rest of you, go away :) ).
>
> How do you do Python code-folding in Emacs?
>
> Thanks!
>
> ~K
I tried the outline-mode and it seemed to work. It can
collapse different blocks of code, such as functions,
classes, etc.
Howeve
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 06:29:46 -0700 (PDT) ernest
wrote:
> On 15 Jul, 18:45, kj wrote:
> > This is a question _for Emacs users_ (the rest of you, go away :)
> > ).
> >
> > How do you do Python code-folding in Emacs?
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> > ~K
>
> I tried the outline-mode and it seemed to work. I
Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message , MRAB wrote:
Normally it's only string literals that could be so long that you might
want to split them over several lines. It is somewhat unusual to have a
_numeric_ literal that's very very long!
Seems a peculiar assumption to make in a language that a
In Thomas Jollans
writes:
>On 07/15/2010 06:41 PM, kj wrote:
>> In Thomas Jollans
>> writes:
>>
>>> http://docs.python.org/library/ctypes.html#fundamental-data-types
>>
>>> c_longdouble maps to float
>>
>> Thanks for pointing this out!
>> ~K
>> (Does it make *any difference at all* to use
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 05:45:50 -0700, Inquisitive Scientist wrote:
> I am having problems with running copy.deepcopy on very large data
> structures containing lots of numeric data:
[...]
> This seems perfectly safe, should speed things up, keep the memo dict
> smaller, and be easy to add. Can someo
Stefan Behnel wrote:
Les Schaffer, 16.07.2010 15:07:
agree with all the other suggestions: multiple threads for data and GUI,
The way I read it, the suggestion was to use separate processes, not
multiple threads. That's a pretty important difference.
check. processes, not threads.
Les
--
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 14:49:21 +0100, MRAB wrote:
> Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>> In message , MRAB
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Normally it's only string literals that could be so long that you
>>> might want to split them over several lines. It is somewhat unusual to
>>> have a _numeric_ literal that's very
mukesh tiwari wrote:
On Jul 16, 4:08 am, MRAB wrote:
mukesh tiwari wrote:
Hello all
Currently i am trying to develop a client and server in python. Client
takes screenshot in every 20 seconds and send it to server. Server
store the received file in folder. Here is code for Client
import sys
im
I am overlooking something stupid.
I have two files: one with keywords and another with data (one record per line).
I want to determine for each keyword which lines in the second file
contains that keyword.
The following code is not working. It loops through the second file
but only uses the fi
Victor Subervi wrote:
Hi;
I have the following code:
cursor.execute('select MyTable from optionsDetails where Store=%s',
(store,))
options_tables = [item[0] for item in cursor]
for table in options_tables:
cursor.execute('select * from %' % table)
Should be:
'select *
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 14:49:21 +0100, MRAB wrote:
Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message , MRAB
wrote:
Normally it's only string literals that could be so long that you
might want to split them over several lines. It is somewhat unusual to
have a _numeric_ literal that's
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 10:09 AM, MRAB wrote:
> Victor Subervi wrote:
>
>> Hi;
>> I have the following code:
>>
>>cursor.execute('select MyTable from optionsDetails where Store=%s',
>> (store,))
>>options_tables = [item[0] for item in cursor]
>>for table in options_tables:
>> cur
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 8:34 AM, Johann Spies wrote:
> I am overlooking something stupid.
>
> I have two files: one with keywords and another with data (one record per
> line).
>
> I want to determine for each keyword which lines in the second file
> contains that keyword.
>
> The following code
Johann Spies wrote:
I am overlooking something stupid.
I have two files: one with keywords and another with data (one record per line).
I want to determine for each keyword which lines in the second file
contains that keyword.
The following code is not working. It loops through the second fil
On Jul 16, 2:53 pm, kj wrote:
> This is extremely confusing. From my naive reading of the
> documentation, I would have expected that the following two blocks
> would produce identical results (expl is one of the standard C math
> library exponential functions, with signature "long double expl(lo
> Thomas Jollans, 15.07.2010 18:41:
> > On 07/15/2010 01:00 PM, Paul wrote:
> >> I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module that
> >> correctly generates:
> >> * the plural of singular nouns and verbs
> >> * the singular of plural nouns
> >> * ordinals
> >> * indefinite ar
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 02:09, Heikki Toivonen
wrote:
> That version of M2Crypto does not work with OpenSSL 1.0.x because OpenSSL
> changed APIs. M2Crypto trunk works, as will the next M2Crypto release. So at
> this time, you should check out M2Crypto from the Subversion repository. See
> http://
>>> I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module that
>>> correctly generates:
>>>
>>> * the plural of singular nouns and verbs
>>> * the singular of plural nouns
>>> * ordinals
>>> * indefinite articles
>>> * present participles
>>> * and converts numbers to words
>>
>> Which
Johann Spies wrote:
I am overlooking something stupid.
I have two files: one with keywords and another with data (one record per line).
I want to determine for each keyword which lines in the second file
contains that keyword.
The following code is not working. It loops through the second fil
I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module that
correctly generates:
* the plural of singular nouns and verbs
* the singular of plural nouns
* ordinals
* indefinite articles
* present participles
* and converts numbers to words
>>
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:29 AM, ernest wrote:
> On 15 Jul, 18:45, kj wrote:
>> This is a question _for Emacs users_ (the rest of you, go away :) ).
>>
>> How do you do Python code-folding in Emacs?
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> ~K
>
> I tried the outline-mode and it seemed to work. It can
> collapse diff
class Test:
def __init__(self):
self.value=0
def change(self, val):
self.value=val
if __name__=='__main__':
for x in range(10):
x=Test()
"""
the question is how do i call x.value outside of that for loop?
something like
print x.value ?
"""
thanks for any help.
--
http
I am trying to install a library that requires setuptools.
Unfortunately, setuptools isn't available for Python 3 yet. Is this
correct? Any idea when it may be available OR if there is a different
tool/method of getting setuptools installed for Python 3?
Thanks!!!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailma
On 7/16/2010 7:39 AM, MRAB wrote:
Victor Subervi wrote:
Hi;
I have the following code:
cursor.execute('select MyTable from optionsDetails where Store=%s',
(store,))
options_tables = [item[0] for item in cursor]
for table in options_tables:
cursor.execute('select * from %' % table)
As has b
Paul wrote:
>> Thomas Jollans, 15.07.2010 18:41:
>
>>> On 07/15/2010 01:00 PM, Paul wrote:
I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module
that correctly generates:
>
* the plural of singular nouns and verbs
* the singular of plural nouns
* ordinals
Ray wrote:
class Test:
def __init__(self):
self.value=0
def change(self, val):
self.value=val
if __name__=='__main__':
for x in range(10):
x=Test()
"""
the question is how do i call x.value outside of that for loop?
something like
print x.value ?
"""
thanks for any h
Daniel Fetchinson, 16.07.2010 17:29:
I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module that
correctly generates:
* the plural of singular nouns and verbs
* the singular of plural nouns
* ordinals
* indefinite articles
* present participles
* and converts numbers to words
Which
On 16/07/2010 14:59, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
[snip]
However doing the minimum isn't likely to be very useful. Python is
maintained by volunteers, and there are more bugs than person-hours
available to fix them. Consequently, unless a bug is serious, high-
profile, or affects a developer personal
On Jul 16, 12:17 pm, MRAB wrote:
> Ray wrote:
> > class Test:
> > def __init__(self):
> > self.value=0
> > def change(self, val):
> > self.value=val
>
> > if __name__=='__main__':
> > for x in range(10):
> > x=Test()
> > """
> > the question is how do i call x.value outside o
On 07/16/2010 06:01 PM, Ray wrote:
> if __name__=='__main__':
> for x in range(10):
> x=Test()
> """
> the question is how do i call x.value outside of that for loop?
> something like
> print x.value ?
> """
You would have to keep references to your Test objects (untested code):
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 17:29:44 +0200
Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
> I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a module that
> correctly generates:
>
> * the plural of singular nouns and verbs
> * the singular of plural nouns
> * ordinals
> * indefinite
On 07/16/2010 07:26 AM, pyt...@bdurham.com wrote:
> Thomas,
>
>> Recall that doctest doesn't parse the code, it extracts the docstrings. And
>> docstrings are just strings, and are parsed like strings.
>
> I understand what you're saying, but I'm struggling with how to
> represent the following
On 07/16/2010 06:10 PM, fuglyducky wrote:
> I am trying to install a library that requires setuptools.
> Unfortunately, setuptools isn't available for Python 3 yet. Is this
> correct? Any idea when it may be available OR if there is a different
> tool/method of getting setuptools installed for Pyth
$ python
Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
[GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> "x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
'x.vs'
I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 17:26:05 +0200 Daniel Fetchinson
wrote:
> >>> I'm pleased to announce the release of inflect.py v0.1.8, a
> >>> module that correctly generates:
> >>>
> >>> * the plural of singular nouns and verbs
> >>> * the singular of plural nouns
> >>> * ordinals
> >>> * indefinite articl
I mean to get the man page for '[' like in the following code.
x=[1,2,3]
But help('[') doesn't seem to give the above usage.
###
Mutable Sequence Types
**
List objects support additional operations that allow in-place
modification of the object. Other mutable sequen
On Jun 6, 12:40 am, pdlemper@earthlink.net wrote:
> On the site
> http://code.activestate.com/recipes/langs/python/
> there are several scripts for fractals. See page five.
> These begin
> from PIL import Image
>
> This fails in my python 3.1.2
>
> Google reveals PIL is
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 10:28 PM, Jason Friedman wrote:
> $ python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
> [GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
> >>> "x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
> 'x.vs'
>
> I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
On 07/16/2010 06:58 PM, Jason Friedman wrote:
> $ python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
> [GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
"x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
> 'x.vs'
>
> I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
>>> "x-vs
Hi,
I'm trying to create a standalone app using py2app, but it seems no
matter what I do I get this error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/soren/Documents/workspace/bioxtasraw/dist/RAW.app/
Contents/Resources/__boot__.py", line 158, in
_run('RAW.py')
File "/Users/soren/Do
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 12:58 PM, Jason Friedman wrote:
> $ python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
> [GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
"x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
> 'x.vs'
>
> I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
On 07/16/2010 11:00 AM, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
> Karsten Wutzke wrote:
>>> Yes, typo, I meant strictly.
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Damn, I mean strongly. At least not for identifying which methods to
>> call depending on the type/s.
>>
>> Karsten
>>
> Stringly is the perfect combination of strictl
Jason Friedman wrote:
$ python
Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
[GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
"x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
'x.vs'
I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
.strip, .lstrip and .rstrip treat their argumen
"Steven D'Aprano" wrote in message
news:4c4069de$0$11101$c3e8...@news.astraweb.com...
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 14:49:21 +0100, MRAB wrote:
Not only that, but it only takes 73 digits to write out the total number
of particles in the entire universe:
10
On 7/16/10 12:01 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
I then checked help('LISTLITERALS'), which gives some description that
is available from the language reference. So '[' in "x=[1,2,3]" is
considered as a language feature rather than a function or an
operator?
Yes. It is part of the list literal syntax of th
On 7/13/2010 4:22 AM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
John Nagle wrote:
Arguably, if a function just does a "return",
it should be an error to try to use its return value.
It's been suggested at least once before that the
default return value for a function should be some
special value that raises an exc
On Jul 16, 10:58 am, Jason Friedman wrote:
> $ python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
> [GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> "x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
>
> 'x.vs'
>
> I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
One way to
On 7/16/10 12:30 PM, bart.c wrote:
"Steven D'Aprano" wrote in message
news:4c4069de$0$11101$c3e8...@news.astraweb.com...
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 14:49:21 +0100, MRAB wrote:
Not only that, but it only takes 73 digits to write out the total number
of particles in the entire universe:
100
Click here for nude desi videos
>>>
http://ukpinkgirls.co.cc/
http://uk-worldwebhosting.co.cc/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
I see that there are help topics that are capitalized, which I think
in general are related with languages syntax. I want to see the
complete list of such help topics. Would you please let me know if
there is a command to do so?
>>> help('SUBSCRIPTS')
Related help topics: SEQUENCEMETHODS1
>
Greetings,
I have some code that I wrote and know there is a better way to
write it. I wonder if anyone could point me in the right direction
on making this 'cleaner'.
I have two lists: liveHostList = [ app11, app12, web11, web12, host11 ]
stageHos
On 07/15/2010 09:13 AM, Monyl wrote:
>> Please be clearer about what you want.
>>
>> 1. Animagedoes not "have" acolor, although each pixel in animage
>> does have acolor.
>>
>> 2. Text in a web page does not (necessarily) have a font, although the
>> display engine will use a font of its choice t
Peng Yu wrote:
Hi,
I see that there are help topics that are capitalized, which I think
in general are related with languages syntax. I want to see the
complete list of such help topics. Would you please let me know if
there is a command to do so?
help('SUBSCRIPTS')
Related help topics: SEQU
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 3:10 PM, MRAB wrote:
> Peng Yu wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I see that there are help topics that are capitalized, which I think
>> in general are related with languages syntax. I want to see the
>> complete list of such help topics. Would you please let me know if
>> there is a
On Wednesday 14 July 2010 23:56:27 Monyl wrote:
>
> I will be using a automation tool called Sikuli and select the text or
> an Image.
It sounds to me like this is a question not about Python, but about Sikuli. I
suggest you ask the question at https://answers.launchpad.net/sikuli or on
their
On 07/16/2010 10:21 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 3:10 PM, MRAB wrote:
>> Peng Yu wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I see that there are help topics that are capitalized, which I think
>>> in general are related with languages syntax. I want to see the
>>> complete list of such help topics
Chad Kellerman wrote:
Greetings,
I have some code that I wrote and know there is a better way to
write it. I wonder if anyone could point me in the right direction
on making this 'cleaner'.
I have two lists: liveHostList = [ app11, app12, web11, web12, host11 ]
Peng Yu wrote:
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 3:10 PM, MRAB wrote:
Peng Yu wrote:
Hi,
I see that there are help topics that are capitalized, which I think
in general are related with languages syntax. I want to see the
complete list of such help topics. Would you please let me know if
there is a com
* Johann Spies, on 16.07.2010 16:34:
I am overlooking something stupid.
I have two files: one with keywords and another with data (one record per line).
I want to determine for each keyword which lines in the second file
contains that keyword.
The following code is not working. It loops throu
On 07/16/2010 02:20 PM, Chad Kellerman wrote:
Greetings,
I have some code that I wrote and know there is a better way to
write it. I wonder if anyone could point me in the right direction
on making this 'cleaner'.
I have two lists: liveHostList = [ app11, app12, web11, web12, hos
On 7/16/2010 1:01 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
I mean to get the man page for '[' like in the following code.
x=[1,2,3]
You might find my Python symbol glossary useful.
https://code.google.com/p/xploro/downloads/detail?name=PySymbols.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Python 2.6 under Windows: are the two non-zero values returned by
this function of any practical use? The documentation [1] is
vague and points to the Windows Platform API which I'm not sure
maps 1:1 to the help description.
In looking at the values returned on my system (Windows 7,
64-bit), I won
"ata.jaf" writes:
> import wx
>
> class MainWindow(wx.Frame) :
> def __init__(self, parent, title) :
>wx.Frame.__init__(self, parent, title=title, size=(200, 100))
>self.control = wx.TextCtrl(self, style=wx.TE_MULTILINE)
>self.CreateStatusBar()
>
>filemenu = wx.Menu()
>
>file
On 7/16/10 12:30 PM, bart.c wrote:
they have to be exact. So if you wanted to hardcode 1000! for some
reason, you'd
need some 2568 digits which is a little awkward on one line.
No, only 20 digits
>>> math.factorial(1000)
402387260077093773543702433923003985719374 ...
Most big ints people w
I don't understand why some parts of the Python language (or the Python
standard library too) are implemented in C while some other parts are
implemented in the Python language itself. For instance, lists and
dictionnaries are implemented in C but sets are not.
Wouldn't be better to implement
On Jul 17, 12:34 am, candide wrote:
> I don't understand why some parts of the Python language (or the Python
> standard library too) are implemented in C while some other parts are
> implemented in the Python language itself. For instance, lists and
> dictionnaries are implemented in C but sets a
Hello:
If I want to calculate the runtime of a section of a program. How can I do
it?
Thank you,
Jia
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 18:30:38 +0100, bart.c wrote:
>> It always makes me laugh when I receive an invoice from some company,
>> and the account number or invoice number is (e.g.) 100023456789.
>> Who do they think they're fooling?
>
> I used to do that. Giving someone an invoice number, or prod
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 15:41:45 +0100, MRAB wrote:
>> It always makes me laugh when I receive an invoice from some company,
>> and the account number or invoice number is (e.g.) 100023456789.
>> Who do they think they're fooling?
>>
> It's possible that they're splitting it into fields.
Anythin
On Sat, 17 Jul 2010 01:34:48 +0200, candide wrote:
> I don't understand why some parts of the Python language (or the Python
> standard library too) are implemented in C while some other parts are
> implemented in the Python language itself. For instance, lists and
> dictionnaries are implemented
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 5:42 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 7/16/2010 1:01 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
>>
>> I mean to get the man page for '[' like in the following code.
>>
>> x=[1,2,3]
>
> You might find my Python symbol glossary useful.
> https://code.google.com/p/xploro/downloads/detail?name=PySymbols.ht
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Jia Hu wrote:
> Hello:
>
> If I want to calculate the runtime of a section of a program. How can I do
> it?
Taking you extremely literally:
from time import time
start = time()
run_section_here()
end = time()
runtime = end-start
Assuming you're doing this in orde
Thank you, it is so straightforward.
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:58 PM, Chris Rebert wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Jia Hu wrote:
> > Hello:
> >
> > If I want to calculate the runtime of a section of a program. How can I
> do
> > it?
>
> Taking you extremely literally:
> from time impo
Peng Yu wrote:
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 5:42 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/16/2010 1:01 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
I mean to get the man page for '[' like in the following code.
x=[1,2,3]
You might find my Python symbol glossary useful.
https://code.google.com/p/xploro/downloads/detail?name=PySymbols.h
On 07/16/2010 09:08 PM, MRAB wrote:
Peng Yu wrote:
You might find my Python symbol glossary useful.
https://code.google.com/p/xploro/downloads/detail?name=PySymbols.html
This is for Python 3. Is there one for Python 2.x?
Is anyone /still/ using Python 2.x? ;-)
2.x?! You were lucky. We liv
1 - 100 of 104 matches
Mail list logo