Course Python for Scientists and Engineers in Chicago
===
There will be a comprehensive Python course for scientists and engineers
in Chicago end of February / beginning of March 2012. It consists of a 3-day
intro and a 2-day advanced section.
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 5:44 PM, alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 24, 4:56 am, 8 Dihedral dihedral88...@googlemail.com
wrote:
I know manny python programmers just abandon the list comprehension
in non-trivial processes.
Really? Observation of the python mailing list indicates the
Chris Angelico, 24.01.2012 05:47:
Lua and Pike both quite happily solved hash collision attacks in their
interning of strings by randomizing the hash used, because there's no
way to rely on it. Presumably (based on the intern() docs) Python can
do the same, if you explicitly intern your
Mon, 23 Jan 2012 21:57:16 -0800 (PST)
Rick Johnson a écrit:
Pretty is the most ludicrous of them all! As you will see, pretty
is used superfluously, over and over again! In fact, you could safely omit
pretty without sacrificing any meaning of most all the sentences that
include the word
On 24Jan2012 05:08, Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info
wrote:
| On Tue, 24 Jan 2012 10:49:41 +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote:
|
| | def OnSerialRead(self, event):
| | text = event.data
| | self.sensorabuffer = self.sensorabuffer + text
| | self.sensorbbuffer =
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 11:17 PM, Douglas Eric sekk...@hotmail.com wrote:
I suggest to change this behavior. If one makes a SELECT statement without
any ORDER BY, it would be
clever to automatically sort by the first primary key found in the query, if
any.
The present behavior would still be
Whoops. Wrong list. *sigh* At least there's some variety - it's
not Savoynet this time.
Disregard the mad guy in the corner, he's not saying anything useful anyway...
ChrisA
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 7:29 PM, Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 11:17 PM, Douglas
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
If you want to encourage them to fill up their memory with user provided
data in a non-erasable way, then sure, that would certainly keep an
attacker from having to figure out hash collisions in order to bring down a
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 12:17 AM, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
Chris Angelico, 24.01.2012 05:47:
Lua and Pike both quite happily solved hash collision attacks in their
interning of strings by randomizing the hash used, because there's no
way to rely on it. Presumably (based on the
Hi,
I just added some RAM to my PC @ work and now wanted Python to be
capable to make use of it.
My boot.ini has been containing the /3GB switch for quite a while, but
nevertheless I only could allocate 2 GB in Python.
So I changed python.exe with the imagecfg.exe which I obtained from
y...@zioup.com wrote:
I'm missing something about tkinter updates. How can I give tkinter a
chance to run?
Here's some code:
import time
import tkinter
import tkinter.scrolledtext
tk = tkinter.Tk()
f = tkinter.Toplevel(tk)
st = tkinter.scrolledtext.ScrolledText(f)
st.pack()
On Jan 23, 12:45 pm, Arnaud Delobelle arno...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
It just occurred to me that there's a very simple but slightly
different way to implement properties:
class PropertyType(type):
def __get__(self, obj, objtype):
return self if obj is None else self.get(obj)
Am 23.01.2012 22:48, schrieb M.Pekala:
I think that regex is too slow for this operation, but I'm uncertain
of another method in python that could be faster. A little help would
be appreciated.
Regardless of the outcome here, I would say that your code is still a
bit wonky on the handling of
I have a small python program that uses the pyexiv2 package to view
exif data in image files.
I've hit a problem because I have a filename with accented characters
in its path and the pyexiv2 code traps as follows:-
Traceback (most recent call last):
File /home/chris/bin/eview.py, line
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 3:57 AM, tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I have a small python program that uses the pyexiv2 package to view
exif data in image files.
I've hit a problem because I have a filename with accented characters
in its path and the pyexiv2 code traps as follows:-
Traceback
tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I have a small python program that uses the pyexiv2 package to view
exif data in image files.
I've hit a problem because I have a filename with accented characters
in its path and the pyexiv2 code traps as follows:-
Traceback (most recent call last):
Am 24.01.2012 00:13 schrieb Thomas Rachel:
[sorry, my Thunderbird kills the indentation]
And finally, you can make use of re.finditer() resp.
sensorre.finditer(). So you can do
sensorre = re.compile(r'\$(.)(.*?)\$') # note the change
theonebuffer = '$A1234$$B-10$$C987$' # for now
On 2012-01-24, Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 4:57 PM, Rick Johnson
rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
[RR's usual schtick]
All in favour, say Aye in Latin. All against, say Plonk.
I plonked RR ages ago. Now I only get to see his post when somebody
replies
On 24/01/2012 05:57, Rick Johnson wrote:
cut rant
I would wish that pedantic citizens of the British colony in America
stopped calling whatever misinterpreted waffle they produce, English.
--
mph
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In America, they haven't spoken it for years! -- Professor Henry Higgins, My
Fair Lady
-Original Message-
On 24/01/2012 05:57, Rick Johnson wrote:
cut rant
I would wish that pedantic citizens of the British colony in America stopped
calling whatever misinterpreted waffle they produce,
I use PythonWin to debug the Python scripts we write. Our scripts often use
the log2py logging package. When running the scripts inside the debugger, we
seem to get one logging object for every time we run the script. The result is
that after running the script five times, the log file
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 09:05, Martin P. Hellwig
martin.hell...@gmail.com wrote:
On 24/01/2012 05:57, Rick Johnson wrote:
cut rant
I would wish that pedantic citizens of the British colony in America stopped
calling whatever misinterpreted waffle they produce, English.
I, sir, as a citizen of
Window never stops to surprise me, I've been banging my head since
yesterday and only
now I now what is the problem.
So suppose I have something like
from os import path
print path.expanduser('~')
If I run it from cmd.exe I get /Users/user, doing the same in an emacs
eshell buffer I get
Wh. I did not expect this when I signed up to the Python mailing list.
From: dreadpiratej...@gmail.com
Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2012 09:51:57 -0500
Subject: Re: The devolution of English language and slothful c.l.p behaviors
exposed!
To: martin.hell...@gmail.com
CC: python-list@python.org
On 24/01/2012 7:06, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Mon, 23 Jan 2012 21:57:16 -0800, Rick Johnson wrote:
Here is a grep from the month of September 2011 showing the rampantly
egregious misuse of the following words and phrases:
* pretty
* hard
* right
* used to
* supposed to
I'm pretty
I suggest to create English 2.0, and convince the whole world to speak
your own
way better implementation of English.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 9:56 AM, Andrea Crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
Window never stops to surprise me, I've been banging my head since yesterday
and only
now I now what is the problem.
So suppose I have something like
from os import path
print path.expanduser('~')
If I run it
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 11:05 AM, Jerry Hill malaclyp...@gmail.com wrote:
So, my guess is that emacs is mangling your HOME environment variable.
That appears to be confirmed by the emacs documentation here:
On 01/24/2012 04:05 PM, Jerry Hill wrote:
The os.path.exanduser() docs (
http://docs.python.org/library/os.path.html#os.path.expanduser ) say
that On Windows, HOME and USERPROFILE will be used if set, otherwise
a combination of HOMEPATH and HOMEDRIVE will be used. An initial ~user
is handled by
On 01/24/2012 04:09 PM, Jerry Hill wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 11:05 AM, Jerry Hillmalaclyp...@gmail.com wrote:
So, my guess is that emacs is mangling your HOME environment variable.
That appears to be confirmed by the emacs documentation here:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 11:10 AM, Andrea Crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
Ah yes thanks for the explanation, on Python 2.7 on Linux I don't see
the same doc, it might have been updated later..
Anyway I just want to make sure that I get always the same path,
not depending on the program.
On 01/24/2012 04:09 PM, Jerry Hill wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 11:05 AM, Jerry Hillmalaclyp...@gmail.com wrote:
So, my guess is that emacs is mangling your HOME environment variable.
That appears to be confirmed by the emacs documentation here:
On Tue, 24 Jan 2012 09:21:37 +0100, Jérôme wrote:
Mon, 23 Jan 2012 21:57:16 -0800 (PST) Rick Johnson a écrit:
Of course, used to and supposed to will require people to rethink
there lazy and slothful ways.
I don't even see the problem with those...
As someone already said, english is a
On 24/01/2012 14:51, J wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 09:05, Martin P. Hellwig
martin.hell...@gmail.com wrote:
On 24/01/2012 05:57, Rick Johnson wrote:
cut rant
I would wish that pedantic citizens of the British colony in America stopped
calling whatever misinterpreted waffle they produce,
On 01/24/2012 04:21 PM, Jerry Hill wrote:
windows might make the trick..
It would not do the trick on my windows XP workstation here. Your
target environments may be different, of course. From a general
command prompt (cmd.exe) on my work machine, here's what you would
have to work with:
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 3:26 AM, Martin P. Hellwig
martin.hell...@gmail.com wrote:
Having said that, I do like to bring to your attention that her Majesty,
never ratified the 'Declaration of Independence'. :-)
Oh, stop it. It's high time we got rid of these silly distinctions of
English and
On Jan 23, 6:54 pm, Wanderer wande...@dialup4less.com wrote:
Back in scipy 0.7 there was a package called stsci that had function
scipy.stsci.image.median that created a median image from a stack of
images. The stsci package is dropped in v0.8. Has this functionality
been moved to a different
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 3:36 AM, Andrea Crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
I just would like to be able to write somewhere in a place that should
always exist,
why Windows you're so annoying :(?
Can you use the current directory, and rely on the user running your
program from a viable
On 01/24/2012 04:43 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 3:36 AM, Andrea Crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
I just would like to be able to write somewhere in a place that should
always exist,
why Windows you're so annoying :(?
Can you use the current directory, and rely on
On 24/01/2012 16:41, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 3:26 AM, Martin P. Hellwig
martin.hell...@gmail.com wrote:
Having said that, I do like to bring to your attention that her Majesty,
never ratified the 'Declaration of Independence'. :-)
Oh, stop it. It's high time we got rid
I’m new to python, sorry if my question is a bit naive, I was
wondering if it is possible to parse some text (ie. from a text file
or say html) and then dynamically create a class?
for example lets say the contents of the text file is:
functionName: bark arg1: numberBarks
On 24/01/2012 15:46, Andrea Crotti wrote:
I suggest to create English 2.0, and convince the whole world to speak
your own
way better implementation of English.
Too late for that when comparing modern English with that of e.g.
Dickens, Shakespeare, Chaucer and Bede, hence at a minimum I reckon
Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I have a small python program that uses the pyexiv2 package to view
exif data in image files.
I've hit a problem because I have a filename with accented characters
in its path and the pyexiv2 code traps as follows:-
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 3:57 AM, tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I have a small python program that uses the pyexiv2 package to view
exif data in image files.
I've hit a problem because I have a filename with accented characters
in its path and the
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 4:22 AM, T H turian9...@gmail.com wrote:
I’m new to python, sorry if my question is a bit naive, I was
wondering if it is possible to parse some text (ie. from a text file
or say html) and then dynamically create a class?
Presuming that your class name comes from
Hi,
I have a simple PyQt application that creates a webkit instance to
scrape AJAX web pages. It works well but I can't call it twice. I
think the application is not closed correctly, that's why the 2nd call
fails. Here is the code below. I also put it on pastebin:
http://pastebin.com/gkgSSJHY .
if line is not None: probably does not work the way you expect. You
might try
if line.strip():
Take a look at this quick example
test_lines = [Number 1\n, \n, ]
for ctr, line in enumerate(test_lines):
print ctr, line
if line is not None:
print not None
--
On Jan 24, 6:22 pm, T H turian9...@gmail.com wrote:
I’m new to python, sorry if my question is a bit naive, I was
wondering if it is possible to parse some text (ie. from a text file
or say html) and then dynamically create a class?
for example lets say the contents of the text file is:
As I assume the text you want to process has some source you might want to
look at http://docs.python.org/library/pickle.html ...
2012/1/24 T H turian9...@gmail.com
I’m new to python, sorry if my question is a bit naive, I was
wondering if it is possible to parse some text (ie. from a text
On 24 January 2012 17:25, Blockheads Oi Oi breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 24/01/2012 15:46, Andrea Crotti wrote:
I suggest to create English 2.0, and convince the whole world to speak
your own
way better implementation of English.
Too late for that when comparing modern English with
On 24/01/2012 20:03, Joshua Landau wrote:
On 24 January 2012 17:25, Blockheads Oi Oi breamore...@yahoo.co.uk
mailto:breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 24/01/2012 15:46, Andrea Crotti wrote:
I suggest to create English 2.0, and convince the whole world to
speak
your
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 8:13 AM, Blockheads Oi Oi
breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 24/01/2012 20:03, Joshua Landau wrote:
A simple version number doesn't imply huge breakages. Try English2 v1.0!
In fact, why would a perfect language need a version number?
It would be difficult to maintain
On 24/01/2012 21:20, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 8:13 AM, Blockheads Oi Oi
breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 24/01/2012 20:03, Joshua Landau wrote:
A simple version number doesn't imply huge breakages. Try English2 v1.0!
In fact, why would a perfect language need a version
Is it safe to use unittest with threads?
In particular, if a unit test fails in some thread other than the one
that launched the test, will that information be captured properly?
A search of the net shows a suggestion that all failures must be
reported in the main thread, but I couldn't find
Talking about version numbers, shouldn't the English dictionary and grammar
be under version control? I nominate Oxford University to administer this,
after all they produce the largest English dictionary and are experts on
English grammar. Someone had better let them know because the impending
On Jan 23, 11:57 pm, Rick Johnson rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com
wrote:
Here is a grep from the month of September 2011 showing the rampantly
egregious misuse of the following words and phrases:
Actually my custom script had a small flaw which kept it from
capturing ALL the atrocities. Here is a
Top posting fixed.
-Original Message-
From: Blockheads Oi Oi [mailto:breamore...@yahoo.co.uk]
Sent: Wednesday, 25 January 2012 10:26 a.m.
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Re: The devolution of English language and slothful c.l.p
behaviors exposed!
On 24/01/2012 21:20, Chris Angelico
Hello!
For libxml2, are there any manual. For this library?, i searched on
google and just find the following URL xmlsoft.org
Wich can not find any API manual. I will apreciate your support if have one
for the library in python.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Mauricio Martinez Garcia morfeo...@gmail.com wrote:
For libxml2, are there any manual. For this library?, i searched on
google and just find the following URL xmlsoft.org Wich can not find
any API manual.
Did you check under Reference Manual at http://xmlsoft.org? That's the
second entry
Is this possible please? I have done some searching but it is hard to
narrow down Google searches to this question. What I would like to do
is, for example:
1) define a class Foo in file test.py... give it some methods
2) define a file test2.py which contains a set of methods that are
methods of
Tanks Nicholas.
Yes, check the documentation effectively and yet it does not require C
programminginformation if not for python, the only site I found examples and
libxml2 for python propertiesis as follows
http://mikekneller.com/kb/python/libxml2python / part1. And, apart from
there to build a
In article
569a94a3-cd84-449b-b0c1-80348014a...@i10g2000pbl.googlegroups.com,
lh lhughe...@gmail.com wrote:
Is this possible please? I have done some searching but it is hard to
narrow down Google searches to this question. What I would like to do
is, for example:
1) define a class Foo in
On 01/24/2012 05:43 PM, Rick Johnson wrote:
Actually my custom script had a small flaw which kept it from
capturing ALL the atrocities. Here is a run with the bugfixes:
Wow. I had to trim 80% of your e-mail just to get rid of old quoted
posts. For an expert, Rick, I'm really surprised you
On 01/24/2012 10:49 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
On 01/24/2012 05:43 PM, Rick Johnson wrote:
Actually my custom script had a small flaw which kept it from
capturing ALL the atrocities. Here is a run with the bugfixes:
Wow. I had to trim 80% of your e-mail just to get rid of old quoted
posts.
On 24Jan2012 19:54, lh lhughe...@gmail.com wrote:
| Is this possible please? I have done some searching but it is hard to
| narrow down Google searches to this question. What I would like to do
| is, for example:
| 1) define a class Foo in file test.py... give it some methods
| 2) define a file
Mauricio Martinez Garcia, 25.01.2012 02:46:
For libxml2, are there any manual. For this library?, i searched on
google and just find the following URL xmlsoft.org
Wich can not find any API manual. I will apreciate your support if have one
for the library in python.
Any reason you're not
On Tue, 24 Jan 2012 13:54:23 -0800, Ross Boylan wrote:
Is it safe to use unittest with threads?
I see nobody else has answered, so I'll have a go.
I think you need to explain what you mean here in a little more detail.
If you mean, I have a library that uses threads internally, and I want
to
Martin v. Löwis mar...@v.loewis.de added the comment:
If other VMs need this test for some reason, they can easily add a test case
themselves. I'm -1 on adding test cases to bug fix releases just for
completeness. A lacking test is not a bug, and hence must not be added to a bug
fix release.
Roundup Robot devn...@psf.upfronthosting.co.za added the comment:
New changeset 839fa289e226 by Antoine Pitrou in branch '3.2':
Issue #13772: In os.symlink() under Windows, do not try to guess the link
http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/839fa289e226
New changeset a7406565ef1c by Antoine Pitrou in
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Should be fixed now!
--
resolution: - fixed
stage: patch review - committed/rejected
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue13772
Charles-François Natali neolo...@free.fr added the comment:
I propose applying the following patch.
The test looks good to me (except we don't remove TESTFN explicitely,
but I'm not sure it's really necessary).
As for the patch, couldn't we put all the file stream flushing in one place?
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Here is a patch for 3.2. importlib doesn't have the issue, so I just added a
test.
--
stage: - patch review
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue11235
Changes by Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr:
--
keywords: +patch
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file24310/imptimestampoverflow.patch
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue11235
___
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Updated patch sanitizing the various flushes done on exit, as per
Charles-François's recommendation. Also removes TESTFN explicitly.
--
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file24311/mpstderrflush2.patch
Xavier Morel xavier.mo...@masklinn.net added the comment:
Creating the tables should not be too hard, especially using e.g. org-mode, but:
1. Where should those tables live? The argparse documentation is pretty big and
there's no completely obvious place. I would guess table 1. could just
Charles-François Natali neolo...@free.fr added the comment:
LGTM.
(I just noticed a bug in Rietveld: when one selects expand 10 after,
the line right after that marker appears duplicated in the new view).
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Nick Coghlan ncogh...@gmail.com added the comment:
My specific suggestion is to have a dedicated Quick Reference section before
the first example.
This section would be aimed at two groups of people:
- those wanting a quick overview of the features argparse offers them (This
looks
Changes by Ezio Melotti ezio.melo...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +ezio.melotti
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue13686
___
___
Changes by Ezio Melotti ezio.melo...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +ezio.melotti
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue13850
___
___
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
GetSystemTimeAsFileTime() represent durations as multiple of 100ns,
unfortunately its value is only updated every 15ms or so. Precision is not
accuracy...
--
nosy: +amaury.forgeotdarc
___
Nick Coghlan ncogh...@gmail.com added the comment:
I realised that the lack of a clear binary/text distinction would make it messy
to do the split docs in 2.7, so I made a new branch based on 3.2 instead (link
to repo updated accordingly).
--
assignee: eric.araujo - ncoghlan
STINNER Victor victor.stin...@haypocalc.com added the comment:
GetSystemTimeAsFileTime() represent durations as multiple of 100ns,
unfortunately its value is only updated every 15ms or so. Precision is not
accuracy...
It is possible to improve the accuracy of this clock using the
Xavier Morel xavier.mo...@masklinn.net added the comment:
My specific suggestion is to have a dedicated Quick Reference section
before the first example.
OK, that looks like a good plan.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
sbt shibt...@gmail.com added the comment:
Currently, on both Windows and Unix, when the main thread of a child process
exits:
* atexit callbacks are NOT run (although multiprocessing.util._exit_function IS
run),
* the main thread does NOT wait for non-daemonic background threads.
A simple
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
NtSetTimerResolution is a system-wide change, and may have impact on other
running applications. It may be an option to set it during the execution of
profile.run() for example, but I would not enable it just to call time.clock().
New submission from Vikash Agrawal vikashagrawal1...@gmail.com:
Packaging distutils2 for Fedora
The spec file, is attached and lack many things. I also need to add files like
README, COPYING etc.
The problem is, after installtion of the generated rpm, python
Hynek Schlawack h...@ox.cx added the comment:
I took a deep dive into parts of CPython that were unknown to me :) and dug up
the following:
Methods like os.stat or even os.open convert the file name using et in
PyArg_ParseTuple[AndKeywords].
OTOH, open() and io.open() just hand through the
New submission from Boštjan Mejak bostjan.me...@gmail.com:
I have collected a small amount of documentation fixes in my patch. Please
review it and apply it. No pressure. ;)
--
assignee: docs@python
components: Documentation
files: changes.diff
keywords: patch
messages: 151900
nosy:
STINNER Victor victor.stin...@haypocalc.com added the comment:
NtSetTimerResolution is a system-wide change, and may have impact on other
running applications. It may be an option to set it during the execution of
profile.run() for example, but I would not enable it just to call
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Yes, fixing the conversion block is probably the right approach.
Apparently posixmodule.c uses PyUnicode_FSConverter, perhaps that would work?
(also make sure that the case where a bytes string is given is fixed too:
open(b\x00)
Traceback (most
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
My understanding (and recollection, but I don't have notes I can point at to
hand) is that one goal that arose from recent VM and language summits was for
the CPython test suite to be used as the validating test suite, with
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Oh, and in case it isn't clear, this request is *coming* from one of the other
VMs (pypy), so if my summit recollection is correct, they are in fact adding a
test that they need by submitting this issue :)
(Or at least they will have
Nick Coghlan ncogh...@gmail.com added the comment:
Pushed an initial cut to my sandbox branch. Built HTML is attached so you can
get a general idea of how it looks (links, etc, obviously won't work).
So far, I have made the split into 3 sections and updated the new (shorter)
Sequence Types
Changes by Hynek Schlawack h...@ox.cx:
--
nosy: +hynek
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue13849
___
___
Python-bugs-list mailing list
Hynek Schlawack h...@ox.cx added the comment:
JFTR, file()'s C equivalent is fileio_init and not io_open, I lost track of all
the opens. ;)
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue13848
Martin v. Löwis mar...@v.loewis.de added the comment:
If so, I think this change should not checked into the 2.7 branch. Instead, a
separate branch should be made for changes not intended for CPython, but for
Python implementations in general. Making the Python test suite usable for
other
Martin v. Löwis mar...@v.loewis.de added the comment:
Reconsidering: I think it shouldn't be checked into the cpython *repository*.
Instead, if PyPy developers want to contribute changes to the test suite and
standard library to improve the standard library, there should be a separate
Dave Malcolm dmalc...@redhat.com added the comment:
Hi Vikash - thanks for working on this.
It's normal when packaging code downstream for Fedora to file a package
review request at bugzilla.redhat.com, following the process here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Package_Review_Process
(sorry
Nick Coghlan ncogh...@gmail.com added the comment:
Note: without the Python docs CSS to create the sidebar, the internal table of
contents appears at the *bottom* of the rendered page.
Really, reviewing this sensibly is probably going to require building the docs
locally after using hg pull
James Sanders bistromath...@gmail.com added the comment:
I've submitted a patch that just uses save_global to pickle Ellipsis and
NotImplemented, so the resulting pickle should be unpicklable anywhere. I'm
completely new to the C API so not sure if the way I am building python strings
(to
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