Hello,
I'm pleased to announce the translation of the quick reference for Python 3.1
in english. It is a one recto-verso page filled with language basics and
advanced constructions.
Web page for all versions and source document download:
http://perso.limsi.fr/pointal/python:abrege
Direct
In message ibbs16$do...@reader1.panix.com, Grant Edwards wrote:
My question is why bother with 2.5?
In mitigation, your honour, let me plead that the latest Debian Stable still
ships with that version.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 9, 8:14 am, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-11-09, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 11/9/2010 10:26 AM, RJB wrote:
I have been trying to redevelop a syntax page for Python at
http://cse.csusb.edu/dick/samples/python.syntax.html
Page does not load
r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com writes:
You use your main address on USENET rather than a junk one!? Obfuscated or
not that's either brave or foolhardy!
I use my real email address. I also have an aggressive spam filter.
But I don't think that much of my comes from Usenet harvesters any more,
On 10/11/10 07:36, Ian Kelly wrote:
On 11/9/2010 11:14 PM, r0g wrote:
Me too when possible, TBH if I only needed strings and there was no
pressing security issue I'd just do this...
config = {}
for line in (open(config.txt, 'r')):
if len(line) 0 and line[0] #:
param, value =
Lou Pecora pec...@anvil.nrl.navy.mil writes:
Bigger question: How do you pronouce it?
Rhymes with `grumpy'.
-- [mdw]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi
From time to time I observe a deadlock in subprocess.Popen. I see the
childprocess beeing defunct and if I attach gdb to the stuck python
script, I can see it waiting on line 1128 in subprocess.py ( data =
_eintr_retry_call(os.read, errpipe_read, 1048576) ).
Any ideas of whats going on? I'm
On 10/11/10 09:50, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a
Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand writes:
In message 87lj52kwln.fsf@metalzone.distorted.org.uk, Mark Wooding
wrote:
One option is to implement a subclass which implements the additional
protocol.
This is why I think object orientation ruins your ability to think
xoff igor.idziejc...@gmail.com writes:
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
you could use itertools.chain:
from itertools import chain
for i in chain(range(3,7), range(17,23)):
...
In message 87lj52kwln.fsf@metalzone.distorted.org.uk, Mark Wooding
wrote:
One option is to implement a subclass which implements the additional
protocol.
This is why I think object orientation ruins your ability to think properly.
For “protocol” read “function”. If you want to implement
mDATE = 2010-11-10 14:52:35.026000
(Not sure if this is string or something else.)
I would like to convert mDATE to integer to add, multiply etc.
For instance, if I try to convert mDATE to seconds
td = mDATE.seconds
I get the error
td = result.mDATE.seconds
AttributeError:
r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com writes:
You use your main address on USENET rather than a junk one!?
Yes. The amount of time spent keeping my spam filter well-trained
is far smaller than the amount I'd lose faffing around with countless
throwaway email addresses.
I have to expose my address on
On Nov 10, 12:49 pm, TheSeeker duane.kauf...@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 9, 10:04 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 8, 3:01 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
TheSeeker wrote:
On Nov 6, 7:06 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
Hey,
On Nov 10, 9:40 am, Zeynel azeyn...@gmail.com wrote:
mDATE = 2010-11-10 14:52:35.026000
(Not sure if this is string or something else.)
I would like to convert mDATE to integer to add, multiply etc.
For instance, if I try to convert mDATE to seconds
td = mDATE.seconds
I get the error
On Nov 10, 6:36 pm, Ian Kelly ian.g.ke...@gmail.com wrote:
That's five whole lines of code. Why go to all that trouble when you
can just do this:
import config
I kid, but only partially.
For myself, generally because I only become aware of the module, or
the module is only written after
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 13:59:02 +, Nobody wrote:
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 13:07:58 +, Martin Gregorie wrote:
FWIW the thing that really irritated me about fetchmail is the way it
only deletes messages at the end of a session and never cleans up after
itself. If a session gets timed out or
On Nov 10, 10:51 am, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
Wait a minute i am confused...? Does Python have a text object that
magically turns into a datetime object?
mDATE = 2010-11-10 14:35:22.863000
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
This is the reason I am asking the question. I am
Hi,
When developing tools I often also work on a module that I need to
import into that tool. Once the work is complete both (or more) files
go to a release location on the network.
The question I have is: what is the easiest way to adjust the import
path depending on whether it's a release
xoff wrote:
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
Am I obliged to use 2 for loops defining the 2 ranges like this:
for i in range (3,7):
do bla
for i in range (7,17):
do bla
or is
On 10 nov, 18:13, Paul Rudin paul.nos...@rudin.co.uk wrote:
xoff igor.idziejc...@gmail.com writes:
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
Am I obliged to use 2 for loops defining the 2
On 10 nov, 18:15, Paul Rubin no.em...@nospam.invalid wrote:
you could use itertools.chain:
from itertools import chain
for i in chain(range(3,7), range(17,23)):
...
I'm assuming you're using python 3. In python 2 each of those ranges
expands immediately to a list, so on the one
Hi, all
Here is the test. Plz help.
/
***/
If you use the new image search of Google, you will find that the
result images are layouted
r0g wrote:
I have a subclass of BaseHHTPRequestHandler which uses a dictonary
paths and a function api_call which are defined in the main
namespace of the module. I'd rather I was able to pass these object to
the constructor and store them as data attributes self.paths and
self.api_call but
In message mailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a reason, to keep the spammers away. I'm assuming
On Nov 10, 12:53 am, Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-
central.gen.new_zealand wrote:
Sorry...
Was humpty dumpty your favorite nursery rhyme? And it's Num-pee for
me. If the py is appended i use x-pee and if it is pre i use pie-
x.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 13:07:58 +, Martin Gregorie wrote:
FWIW the thing that really irritated me about fetchmail is the way it
only deletes messages at the end of a session and never cleans up after
itself. If a session gets timed out or otherwise interrupted the messages
that were read
Complete resource for free or paid Work at home jobs online/offline.
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Get start earning at your Management work. Great career in Management
Visit: http://managementjobs.webs.com/pm.htm
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 09:34:14 -0800, xoff wrote:
I am curious, why wouldn't you advise something like this:
for i in chain(range(3,7) + range(17,23)):
Because it constructs all three lists (both of the individual ranges and
their concatenation) in memory. For a trivial example, that isn't a
On Nov 10, 9:13 am, Zeynel azeyn...@gmail.com wrote:
For instance, when the tutorial
hashttp://docs.python.org/release/2.6/library/datetime.html
class datetime.datetime
A combination of a date and a time. Attributes: year, month, day,
hour, minute, second, microsecond, and tzinfo.
What
On 11/9/2010 7:13 PM, Seebs wrote:
On 2010-11-09, Terry Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
I've been wondering why C programmers keep writing code susceptible to
buffer overruns ;=).
Because we're dumb!
(Actually, in my defense, my code almost never, if ever, has buffer
overruns. I do in some
On Nov 9, 6:33 pm, Steve Holden st...@holdenweb.com wrote:
On 11/9/2010 4:18 AM, Geoff Bache wrote:
Hi all,
One of the things I've always loved about Python (having come from
compiled languages) was the lack of an extra step between changing my
code and running it.
On my current
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 12:04:01 +, Mark Wooding wrote:
Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand writes:
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for
all to see. I obfuscated it for a reason, to keep the spammers away.
I'm assuming this was a momentary
In article 2010111007444115344-nom...@thisaddresscom,
Sven nom...@thisaddress.com wrote:
On 2010-11-10 01:53:58 -0500, Lawrence D'Oliveiro said:
Sorry...
no.
Yes, except for one other, above. :-)
Bigger question: How do you pronouce it? Some say num pee. Not the
greatest image to
On Nov 10, 5:00 pm, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
Give lxml.objectify a try. It doesn't use DTDs, but does what you want.
Yes I should take the time to familiarise myself with the lxml API in
general. I mostly use libxml2 and libxslt nowadays. For simple stuff
(like this) I use a
Real profiles and real moms are alone
http://urlrunt.me?c92
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
xoff wrote:
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
Am I obliged to use 2 for loops defining the 2 ranges like this:
for i in range (3,7):
do bla
for i in range (7,17):
do bla
or is
Hi,
Can anyone help on this?
/
/
The project should either be hosted online and usable from there, or
can be run locally. Complete ource code should be delivered along
In message mailman.787.1289336127.2218.python-l...@python.org, Terry Reedy
wrote:
To echo John Nagle's point, if you want non-masochist volunteers to read
your code, write something readable like:
dict1 = {'ab': [[1,2,3,'d3','d4',5], 12],
'ac': [[1,3,'78a','79b'], 54],
On 2010-11-10 01:53:58 -0500, Lawrence D'Oliveiro said:
Sorry...
no.
--
./Sven
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2010-11-10, Mark Wooding m...@distorted.org.uk wrote:
Lou Pecora pec...@anvil.nrl.navy.mil writes:
Bigger question: How do you pronouce it?
Rhymes with `grumpy'.
Num-Pie
--
Grant Edwards grant.b.edwardsYow! Boys, you have ALL
at
Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand writes:
In message 878w12kt5x.fsf@metalzone.distorted.org.uk, Mark Wooding
wrote:
2. The MainWindow class only has the `Window' attribute described in
its definition. Apparently there are other attributes as well (the
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010 17:01:05 +1300, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message ibbj3j$pv...@localhost.localdomain, Martin Gregorie wrote:
...and don't forget getmail, a better behaved replacement for
fetchmail.
I was just looking this up in the Getmail FAQ, since I didn’t know about
the
Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand writes:
In message mailman.787.1289336127.2218.python-l...@python.org, Terry Reedy
wrote:
To echo John Nagle's point, if you want non-masochist volunteers to read
your code, write something readable like:
dict1 = {'ab':
On Nov 9, 10:04 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 8, 3:01 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
TheSeeker wrote:
On Nov 6, 7:06 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
Hey,
I released version 0.2.2 of my pythonic text-editor Deditor.
On Nov 10, 10:05 am, Zeynel azeyn...@gmail.com wrote:
AttributeError: 'datetime.datetime' object has no attribute 'seconds'
First of all put some scaffolding in this code. What is scaffolding.
Basically some debug print statements so you can follow the trail of
errors. You need to learn how to
Greetings everybody,
I've tried to come up with this message for a couple of weeks now and
it doesn't look like I'm getting any clearer in my thoughts so I
decided that it's probably best to take the plunge and ask you guys to
kindly throw me a rope...
What I'm trying to come up with is some
Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand writes:
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a reason, to keep the spammers away. I'm assuming
this was a momentary lapse of judgement, for which I expect an apology.
xoff igor.idziejc...@gmail.com writes:
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
Am I obliged to use 2 for loops defining the 2 ranges like this:
for i in range (3,7):
do bla
for i in range
For instance, when the tutorial has
http://docs.python.org/release/2.6/library/datetime.html
class datetime.datetime
A combination of a date and a time. Attributes: year, month, day,
hour, minute, second, microsecond, and tzinfo.
What does this mean? How do I use it?
For instance, I have a
I was wondering what the best method was in Python programming for 2
discontinued ranges. e.g. I want to use the range 3 to 7 and 17 to 23.
Am I obliged to use 2 for loops defining the 2 ranges like this:
for i in range (3,7):
do bla
for i in range (7,17):
do bla
or is there a more clever way
I agree with Peter:
* iterate over the list directly
* use %10 instead of string conversion + slice
(*) use genexps
Good luck,
Matteo
On Tue, Nov 9, 2010 at 8:18 PM, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 11/9/2010 2:00 PM, Matty Sarro wrote:
I'm working on one of the puzzles on pyschools.com
Hi,
I need to enumerate a couple hundred strings to constants and export
them to another module(s) globals.
In the mean time I want to keep my module's namespace as clear as I can
and I don't want to use import * later.
Here is the code I intend to use:
test.py
1 class Apinamespace():
Hi Folks
I am studing yet (with fever, grasp and headache).
I know I can do better, but first I should learn more about
dictionary comprehension syntax in python 2.65
dict1 = {'ab':[[1,2,3,'d3','d4',5],12],'ac':[[1,3,'78a','79b'],54],'ad':
[[56,57,58,59],34], 'ax': [[56,57,58,59],34]}
If memory serves, the following should work fine, as long as your happy for
these vars to have the same value for all instances of the RequestHandler
(static)
MyHandler = PlainAJAXRequestHandler
MyHandler.paths = my_paths_var
webServer = HTTPServer( server_address, MyHandler)
An alternative I've
On 11/10/10 12:26 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.793.1289347547.2218.python-l...@python.org, Robert Kern
wrote:
For me, putting the brackets on their own lines (and using a trailing
comma) has little to do with increasing readability. It's for making
editing easier. Keeping
I'll look at the options. But anyway, only to give an example of the
configs I told, the ShoX project (at sourceforge.net) has xml as
config files. I'm not talking about common users to edit the xmls,
it's about the developer edit them :-) I'm working in a python
wireless sensor network simulator,
If you are using Python 2.6 or greater, look into the multiprocessing
module. It may contain 90% of what you need.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tuesday 09 November 2010, 03:10:24 Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message 4cd7987e$0$1674$742ec...@news.sonic.net, John Nagle
wrote:
It's the New York Times' paywall. They're trying to set a
cookie, and will redirect the URL until you store and return the
cookie.
And if they find
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 6:49 AM, alexander bookre...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Can anyone help on this?
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1901828/best-python-xmpp-jabber-client-library
http://www.djangoproject.com/
Come back when you have a much less nebulous question. And try
googling first
Hi All,
I'm writing a Django App to webify a Python script I wrote that parses
some big XML docs and summarizes certain data contained within. This
app will be used by a closed group of people, all with their own login
credentials to the system (backed off to the corp SSO system). I've
already
On 11/10/10 3:50 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a
Hi Folks,
I am quite new to python and I don't have a lot of experience with it yet.
I have two simple questions:
1. Is there a way to limit the number of times a list comprehension will
execute? E.g. I want to read from input only 5 values, so I would like
something like (the values between #
Gregory Ewing greg.ew...@canterbury.ac.nz wrote:
Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
Any reason your project is not easy_installable?
Mainly because I'm not a setuptools user and haven't been
motivated to learn how to do this so far.
Applause!!
Bill
--
On 11/10/2010 8:19 AM rantingrick said...
I would start at the loop and figure out what is going on from there
with some print statements and the functions i showed you. Debugging
is a large part of any programming project. We all do it everyday. So
the sooner you learn the better. If you have a
On 11/10/2010 9:34 AM xoff said...
On 10 nov, 18:15, Paul Rubinno.em...@nospam.invalid wrote:
potentially lots of storage (you should use xrange instead). On the
other hand you could just concatenate the lists with +, but I wouldn't
advise that.
I am curious, why wouldn't you advise
On Nov 10, 1:05 am, r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com wrote:
That's five whole lines of code. Why go to all that trouble when you can
just do this:
import config
Heh, mainly because I figure the config module will have a lot more
options than I have use for right now and therefore the docs
... and this works!
def intersect(s1, s2):
... d = {}
... e = {}
... r1 = filter(s1.has_key, s2.keys())
... for x in r1:
... d[x]= filter(lambda z:z in s1[x][0],s2[x][0])
... if len(d[x]) 0:
... e[x] = d[x]
... return e
...
intersect(dict1,dict2)
On 11/10/2010 6:49 AM alexander said...
Hi,
Can anyone help on this?
/
Probably most of us, but as it's obviously homework, and expected to
take you 1-2 hours for the level class you're taking, and that it's now
six hours later, why not post where you're at and we can help you wrap
On Nov 10, 7:51 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 10, 12:49 pm, TheSeeker duane.kauf...@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 9, 10:04 am, Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
On Nov 8, 3:01 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
TheSeeker wrote:
On
On 10/11/2010 15:13, Zeynel wrote:
For instance, when the tutorial has
http://docs.python.org/release/2.6/library/datetime.html
class datetime.datetime
A combination of a date and a time. Attributes: year, month, day,
hour, minute, second, microsecond, and tzinfo.
What does this mean? How do
On 10/11/2010 17:34, xoff wrote:
On 10 nov, 18:15, Paul Rubinno.em...@nospam.invalid wrote:
you could use itertools.chain:
from itertools import chain
for i in chain(range(3,7), range(17,23)):
...
I'm assuming you're using python 3. In python 2 each of those ranges
expands
Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message mailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it for a reason, to keep the
On 11/10/2010 10:13 AM, Zeynel wrote:
For instance, when the tutorial has
http://docs.python.org/release/2.6/library/datetime.html
class datetime.datetime
A combination of a date and a time. Attributes: year, month, day,
hour, minute, second, microsecond, and tzinfo.
Note 'second' singular,
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 6:42 AM, alexander bookre...@gmail.com wrote:
Subject: Curses Programming
This has nothing whatsoever to do with the (n)curses library or even
console programming. Lying in your subject line does not help gain you
goodwill.
Hi, all
Here is the test. Plz help.
On 11/10/2010 5:12 AM lnenov said...
Hi,
I need to enumerate a couple hundred strings to constants and export
them to another module(s) globals.
Do they really need to be globals? Why not a constants in an
object/container that would neither pollute the global namespace nor
risk being
xoff igor.idziejc...@gmail.com writes:
I am curious, why wouldn't you advise something like this:
for i in chain(range(3,7) + range(17,23)):
First of all, the outer chain does nothing. Second, concatenating the
two lists creates a new list, consuming storage and taking time copying
all the
On 2010-11-10, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
I was referring to Schildt using gets() all the time and thereby
teaching new C generations to do he same.
Ahh, yes.
I am told that the current plan is to kill it in C1X. I would shed no
tears.
-s
--
Copyright 2010, all wrongs reversed.
Am Monday 08 November 2010 02:26:51 schrieb Robert Kern:
On 2010-11-07 18:53 , Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.720.1289149298.2218.python-l...@python.org, Robert
Kern
wrote:
Everyone here knew exactly what he meant.
But if you don’t banana the right tomato, everybody
I have already emailed about this issue, but have still not got any
where.
I have reduced the plugin down to its bare minimum it simple loads the
the python interpreter and imports gtk library.
If i do this outside the embedded python it imports and i can use the
gtk library, so why does it not
On Nov 10, 8:13 am, Zeynel azeyn...@gmail.com wrote:
But when I try
datetime.datetime.mDATE.toordinal())
I get AttributeError.
Others have already explained why mDATE.seconds does not work, but I
wanted to touch on this as well. The above fails because mDATE is
not an attribute of the
On 11/10/10 2:27 PM, Robert Kern wrote:
On 11/10/10 3:50 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on
Simon Mullis si...@mullis.co.uk writes:
If eval is not the way forward, are there any suggestions for
another way to do this?
ast.literal_eval might be the thing for you.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Short story - I have a few thousand files in a directory I need to parse
through. Is there a simple way to loop through files? I'd like to avoid
writing a python script that can parse 1 file, and have to call it a few
thousand times from a bash script. Any input or pointers to functions that'd
Felipe Bastos Nunes, 10.11.2010 13:34:
Does any, libxml2 or lxml, collect children like jdom does in java?
ListElement children = myRoot.getChildren();
Bah, that's *so* Java. ;)
ElementTree and lxml.etree do it like this:
children = list(myRoot)
lxml also supports XPath and lots
On 11/10/2010 4:36 AM Felipe Vinturini said...
Hi Folks,
I am quite new to python and I don't have a lot of experience with it yet.
I have two simple questions:
1. Is there a way to limit the number of times a list comprehension will
execute? E.g. I want to read from input only 5 values, so I
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 12:42 AM, alexander bookre...@gmail.com wrote:
Could any give a hand?
Assignment ? Homework ?
cheers
James
--
-- James Mills
--
-- Problems are solved by method
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 10:36 PM, Felipe Vinturini
felipe.vintur...@gmail.com wrote:
1. Is there a way to limit the number of times a list comprehension will
execute? E.g. I want to read from input only 5 values, so I would like
something like (the values between # # are what I want):
In message 201011100749474192-nom...@thisaddresscom, Sven wrote:
I don't like the idea of flags inside the code as they can often get
missed when developers release their code, ending up with released
versions that import modules from the developer's working directory.
I have used a flag,
Am 10.11.2010 18:56, schrieb Simon Mullis:
Yes, eval is evil, may lead to security issues and it's unnecessary
slow, too.
# In the meantime - and as a proof of concept - I'm using a dict instead.
xpathlib = {
houses: r'[ y.tag for y in x.xpath(//houses/*) ]',
Am 10.11.2010 04:36, schrieb Asun Friere:
Yes but configuration files are not necessarily meant to be edited by
humans either!
Yeah, you are right. I'm sorry but every time I read XML and
configuration in one sentence, I see the horror of TomCat or Shibboleth
XML configs popping up.
--
On Nov 10, 6:12 am, lnenov lne...@mm-sol.com wrote:
Is there a better and more common way to do this?
from itertools import count, izip
class APINamespace(object):
def __init__(self):
self._named_values = []
def enumerate(self, names, start=0, step=1):
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 8:46 AM, Matty Sarro msa...@gmail.com wrote:
Short story - I have a few thousand files in a directory I need to parse
through. Is there a simple way to loop through files? I'd like to avoid
writing a python script that can parse 1 file, and have to call it a few
On 11/10/2010 5:46 PM, Matty Sarro wrote:
Short story - I have a few thousand files in a directory I need to parse
through. Is there a simple way to loop through files? I'd like to avoid
writing a python script that can parse 1 file, and have to call it a few
thousand times from a bash script.
On 11/10/2010 4:50 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message mailman.780.1289326087.2218.python-l...@python.org, Jon
Dufresne wrote:
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro ...
I see that you published my unobfuscated e-mail address on USENET for all to
see. I obfuscated it
rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com writes:
[...] it's Num-pee for me. If the py is appended i use x-pee and
if it is pre i use pie- x.
So pypy is pie-pee, not pie-pie or pee-pee. With that edifying
thought, I'm off to bed.
--
Arnaud
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 8:56 AM, Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com wrote:
Easiest would be print [ v for v in sys.stdin.readlines()[:5] ] but that
still reads the entire sys.stdin (whatever it may be...)
Here's a way of doing the same thing without consuming the entire
stream (sys.stdin):
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 2:46 PM, Matty Sarro msa...@gmail.com wrote:
Short story - I have a few thousand files in a directory I need to parse
through. Is there a simple way to loop through files? I'd like to avoid
writing a python script that can parse 1 file, and have to call it a few
On 11/10/2010 2:46 PM Matty Sarro said...
Short story - I have a few thousand files in a directory I need to parse
through. Is there a simple way to loop through files? I'd like to avoid
writing a python script that can parse 1 file, and have to call it a few
thousand times from a bash script.
On 11/10/2010 6:01 PM, James Mills wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 10:36 PM, Felipe Vinturini
felipe.vintur...@gmail.com wrote:
1. Is there a way to limit the number of times a list comprehension will
execute? E.g. I want to read from input only 5 values, so I would like
something like (the
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