Hi All,
PyDev - Python IDE (Python Development Enviroment for Eclipse) version
0.9.7 with support to java 1.3 and 1.4 has just been released.
Check the homepage (http://pydev.sourceforge.net/) for more details.
IMPORTANT:
- A new package has been added to the pydev release with support to
Kamaelia 0.2.0 has been released!
What is it?
===
Kamaelia is a collection of Axon components designed for network
protocol experimentation in a single threaded, select based environment.
Axon components are python generators are augmented by inbox and outbox
queues (lists) for
HarvestMan 1.4.5 beta 1 follows right at the heels of HarvestMan
1.4.5 alpha 2 which was released on July 21 2005.
The new version adds a lot of improvements on the command line options.
There is a wget like option which allows the user to just download
files without trying to crawl the website.
matplotlib is a 2D plotting package for python. This is a summary of
recent developments in matplotlib since 0.80. For detailed notes, see
http://matplotlib.sf.net/whats_new.html,
http://matplotlib.sf.net/CHANGELOG and
http://matplotlib.sf.net/API_CHANGES
== Whats New ==
matplotlib wiki: this
hello,
I am trying to write a python code which reads a web
service and creates its corresponding wsdl file. Any
idea how to do it.Please help
Thanks
Pranav
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
On Mon, 01 Aug 2005 22:01:06 +0200, Caleb Hattingh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Peter
To my mind, this kind of setup (interface class, or abstact class) is more
usually used in static languages to benefit polymorphism - but python is
dynamically typed, so in which situations would this setup be
On Mon, 01 Aug 2005 14:07:46 -0700, Erik Max Francis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, but raise NotImplementedError instead of Exception. Another trick
you can use is to prevent people from instantiating the abstract class:
class Foo:
def __init__(self):
if
phil hunt wrote:
That's a clever trick, but it's obvious from the code that the class
is intended to be abstract, so if people are stupid enough to shoot
themselves in the foot by creating an instance, I don't feel like
adding extra code to protect themselves from their stupidity.
Right.
Michele Simionato wrote:
I am getting trouble with nested triple quoted strings in doctest.
For instance
$ cat x.py
dummy = '''
something
here
'''
import doctest; doctest.testmod()
$ python x.py
**
File x.py,
Michael Rybak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, everyone.
In topic 2-player game, client and server at localhost, I've asked
about subj, and Peter Hansen suggested to switch to Twisted, Pyro or
the like.
I've tried using Pyro.
I've written a very very simple test-game, in which you have 2
sorry for emailing privately, pressed the wrong reply button
DLB On Mon, 1 Aug 2005 20:14:51 +0300, Michael Rybak [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DLB declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
Is there a way of profiling other than manual (debug output with
DLB Chapter 10 of the Python Library
sorry for emailing privately, pressed the wrong reply button
Each player controls a snake, which is 2 to 12 balls connected to each
other with ropes; by mouse motions you move the snake's head, and the
rest of the body moves adhering normal physics. The objective/gameplay
DLB For
sorry for emailing privately, pressed the wrong reply button
BD Michael Rybak a écrit :
BD (snip)
Is there a way of profiling other than manual (debug output with
measurements and all)? Some tools?
BD http://docs.python.org/lib/profile.html
BD HTH
Oh, wow! Manuals rule, I should have
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Tue, 02 Aug 2005 15:10:23 +1000, Timothy Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
i'm very curious as to what everyone thinks
I suspect most of us think: Where's the code?
followed by: Where's the traceback?
Delaney, Timothy (Tim) wrote:
Peter Hansen wrote:
Change those to raise NotImplementedError('blah') instead and you'll
be taking the more idiomatic approach.
One thing I've noticed, which I may raise on python-dev ...
NotImplementedError does *not* play well with super() ...
class A
Hallöchen!
Mike Meyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Torsten Bronger [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
I'm interested in a language with a big community. This is my
definition of success. [...]
GUI applications seem to be the most attractive application type.
This is not only true for
Jorge Godoy opined:
We can find several problems, almost all of them can be solved with
the admin's creativity.
In response to which Cliff Wells posted an interpreter session:
import creativity
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in ?
ImportError: No module
vi/vim is a godssend if you need a working system that needs to fit in 4
Mb or ROM, but it's an editor not an IDE. You can debate about how good
an editor it is, but that's just differences in taste I suppose.
When talking about IDE's I mean a lot more as 'just' an editor, below is
my 'wishlist',
This is my file
$ python -c print open('x.py').read().encode('base64')
IiIiCj4+PiBkdW1teSA9ICcnJwpzb21ldGhpbmcKaGVyZQonJycKIiIiCmltcG9ydCBkb2N0ZXN0
OyBkb2N0ZXN0LnRlc3Rtb2QoKQo=
but anyway I think Peter Otten is right, the problem is with the
missing dots.
It makes sense, actually, but for some
Jorge Godoy wrote:
I agree where you say that lack of information is a risk. But I don't see
how it -- lack of information -- wouldn't affect both scenarios. At least,
Because you put different probabilities on different outcomes. One easy
'risk markup' would be to assume that parts of the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (phil hunt) writes:
Suppose I'm writing an abstract superclass which will have some
concrete subclasses. I want to signal in my code that the subclasses
will implement certan methods. Is this a Pythonic way of doing what
I have in mind:
class Foo: # abstract superclass
gn20kjss Do not use pyro, use simple UDP protocol.
gn20kjss I've written networked tetris in python, communicating via
gn20kjss UDP protocol, and used it successfully on very congested lines.
Would you please be so kind to share that with me? That would be
greatly helpful, because 1) I'd run it
Kamaelia seems it might be an interesting project. However, I don't
think the project is well served by this announcement -- which I
find vague and hard to understand. Which is a shame, because it
means that other people probably don't understand it very well
either, which means less people
On Tue, 02 Aug 2005 00:42:53 -0400, Mike Meyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (phil hunt) writes:
In practise any Python GUI is going to contain code from otyher
languages since if it was coded all the way down in python it would
be too slow.
Not necessarily. My window manger is
Tomi Kyöstilä wrote:
Why don't I see my solution (__author__ = dOb) in the results? I'm
sure that you got it as you replied to my mail.
Ahhh...sorry. I have your solution and I timed it but I don't have the
results here so I can't add it to the website. I'll do it tomorrow.
Where do the
On Tue, 02 Aug 2005 08:31:27 GMT, Michael Hudson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (phil hunt) writes:
Suppose I'm writing an abstract superclass which will have some
concrete subclasses. I want to signal in my code that the subclasses
will implement certan methods. Is this a
anthonyberet wrote:
This is the first time I have tried out functions (is that the main way
of making subroutines in Python?)
A function is allowed to change it's arguments and to return None, so
yes, you can consider it as a 'subroutine'.
Anyway, my function, mutate, below
#make a child
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (phil hunt) writes:
It would (possibly) be more Pythonic to
define an interface instead,
Does Python have the concept of an interface? When was that added?
It doesn't have one included, but there are at least two
implementations, zope.interface and PyProtocols (I'm sure
None wrote:
Hello,
I am just starting to look into python.I have been prog with php for
several years.My question is:
Can/Is Python used as a web scripting language
Yes, definitively.
There are in fact almost too many web-programming solutions in Python,
from the good ole cgi to the
Ron Adam wrote:
PS. Could someone repost the links to the current pre-pep and the most
recent module version so I can look at it closer look?
Pre-pre-PEP: http://wiki.python.org/moin/PathClass
Reinhold's version of the module is in Python CVS in
nondist/sandbox/path. Jason Orendorff's
Hi,
I'm using httplib to create a mutually authenticated HTTPS connection
with a server.
I create the connection as follows:
c = httplib.HTTPSConnection(uri, key_file = key, cert_file = cert)
However, because I am using a private key I keep getting asked to enter
the password to open that key
I would like to be able to write a C++ function, to be wrapped into
some python, to be able to communicate over pyMPI. As pyMPI is based on
C++ I figure that this should be possible, although I'm not sure of
where to start. I know the basics of swig and pyMPI, but not how I
would do this.
Does
Phil Hunt wrote:
Kamaelia seems it might be an interesting project. However, I don't
think the project is well served by this announcement -- which I
find vague and hard to understand. Which is a shame, because it
means that other people probably don't understand it very well
either, which
Truthfully, the number of frameworks is staggering, tho some are
specialized for blogs/wiki, search engine, PIM, etc.
http://www.colorstudy.com/docs/shootout.html
http://pythonology.org/howto
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python?kwd=Web
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.html#web
I use the following piece of code to contact a webservice,
and read a wsdl file.
from SOAPpy import WSDL
from SOAPpy import URLopener
url= ' http://someserver/somewebservice
url1 = URLopener.URLopener(username='user',passwd='pass')
server=WSDL.Proxy(url1.open(url))
This yields no errors, and
Daniel Dittmar wrote:
Because you put different probabilities on different outcomes. One easy
'risk markup' would be to assume that parts of the standard Python
distribution like TkInter have a higher chance of working with the next
release than external libraries like wxPython. Of course,
2 Aug 2005 03:47:02 -0700 skrev stringy:
I would like to be able to write a C++ function, to be wrapped into
some python, to be able to communicate over pyMPI. As pyMPI is based on
C++ I figure that this should be possible, although I'm not sure of
where to start. I know the basics of swig and
Hello,
Thanks for your reply - that link is very useful, and i have been browsing
through the various multiplatform editors/ide's (i'm looking for something to
use on both my Windows machines and my Mac)
You might want to have a look at the archive of the Python-Mac
mailinglist. Someone
On Tue, 2005-08-02 at 09:45 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
Yes, this is what I meant with legacy code. C and C++ are
actually special-purpose. They are good for controlling a computer
but not for implementing an idea. Their current vitality on almost
all software areas arise from the fact
On 2005-08-02, Odd-R. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
from SOAPpy import WSDL
from SOAPpy import URLopener
url= ' http://someserver/somewebservice
url1 = URLopener.URLopener(username='user',passwd='pass')
server=WSDL.Proxy(url1.open(url))
Is it possible to call WSDL.Proxy with a String? Then you
Hallöchen!
Cliff Wells [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tue, 2005-08-02 at 09:45 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
Yes, this is what I meant with legacy code. C and C++ are
actually special-purpose. They are good for controlling a
computer but not for implementing an idea. Their current
[Michael Sparks]
| Phil Hunt wrote:
|
| Kamaelia seems it might be an interesting project. However, I don't
| think the project is well served by this announcement -- which I
| find vague and hard to understand. Which is a shame, because it
| means that other people probably don't understand
2 Aug 2005 11:38:51 GMT, Lutz Horn [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On 2005-08-02, Odd-R. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
from SOAPpy import WSDL
from SOAPpy import URLopener
url= ' http://someserver/somewebservice
url1 = URLopener.URLopener(username='user',passwd='pass')
server=WSDL.Proxy(url1.open(url))
gene tani wrote:
Truthfully, the number of frameworks is staggering, tho some are
specialized for blogs/wiki, search engine, PIM, etc.
[snip massive yet even so incomplete list]
It's called biodiversity and, while generally this is a good thing, I
think it's high time for some of these Python
matplotlib is a 2D plotting package for python. This is a summary of
recent developments in matplotlib since 0.80. For detailed notes, see
http://matplotlib.sf.net/whats_new.html,
http://matplotlib.sf.net/CHANGELOG and
http://matplotlib.sf.net/API_CHANGES
== Whats New ==
matplotlib wiki: this
James Stroud [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Perhaps some of us are writing software with non-developer end-users in mind
and we kind of keep that mentality when evaluating modules our code uses.
In the commercial environment I'm working in, non-developer end-users
get a frozen executable. They don't
On Tuesday 02 August 2005 09:15, Sion Arrowsmith wrote:
Of course, going back to Dabo there is the question of whether it has
such a thing as a non-developer end-user.
Yes and no. Developers will be the primary users of Dabo, of course, but they
will most likely use it to create apps that
Hi,
I'm a newbie without a technical background making some technology
research for a company I work for.
My aim is to have an idea of the alternatives technologies for
accessing
information produced by a machine with a JBUS interface (RS232) and how
to
access this information realtime in Python
Can someone please comment on this?
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Liu Shuai
Sent: Monday, August 01, 2005 4:29
PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Terminate a thread that
doesn't check for events
Hi all,
I am aware that similar and
hi everyone
my target is implement a function controlla(string - a binary string-)
that check if there is in a string two equal not overlapping
subsequences at least of length limitem:
my code:
def controlla(test):
# print test
limitem=4
lunghezz=len(test)
giampiero mu wrote:
hi everyone
my target is implement a function controlla(string - a binary string-)
that check if there is in a string two equal not overlapping
subsequences at least of length limitem:
You can do this with a regular expression:
import re
I've been working on a Python class object for APRS (Automatic Position
Reporting System - a digital mode used by amateur radio operators) and have
been going through David Mertz's Text Processing in Python book to help in
the construction of the parser component of the class.
I was curious
Yeah. It works on a Sun and Linux, but not Windows. That stinks. We got a
bunch of 1400x1050 display laptops in and now I have to run around changing
a bunch of programs that looked fine on 1024x768 displays.
Thanks!
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tk tries to
Michael Rybak wrote:
That's the problem - or a player input comes in. As I've explained,
this happens a dozen of times per second :(. I've even tried not
checking for player's input after every frame, but do it 3 times more
rare (if framecount % 3 == 0 : process_players_input()). Well, I've
On Tue, 2 Aug 2005 09:51:31 -0400, Liu Shuai [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can someone please comment on this?
[snip - how to stop a thread without its cooperation?]
There's no way to do this with threads, sorry.
Perhaps you could use a child process, instead. Those are typically easy to
The thing that nudged me into trying VIM was the book, The Pragmatic
Programmer. It mentioned Emacs and VIM and the value of learning a
powerful editor and sticking with it. I had tried Emacs three times
long ago, and it didn't click with me. I decided to try VIM, and it
made a lot more sense to
What's the difference between time.clock() and time.time()
(and please don't say clock() is the CPU clock and time() is the actual
time because that doesn't help me at all :)
I'm trying to benchmark some function calls for Zope project and when I
use t0=time.clock(); foo(); print time.clock()-t0
Thanks for the reply Chris.
Are you suggesting running the task in a *separate* process instead of a
separate *thread*? Because if that's the case, I will have to share data
(and possible memory) between that new process and my master process
since they depend on one other.
Yeah I will sure
I'm trying to pickle a class, and while I get no errors or anything,
almost none of the class instance gets pickled, and I don't know
why...Here's the pickled output:
(i__main__
TrainingMatrix
p0
(dp1
S'matrixWords'
p2
I4714
sS'numWords'
p3
I4714
sS'totalWordsProcessed'
p4
I46735
sS'numContexts'
No. On Linux a separate thread is a separate process with shared memory. You
can send a signal to a particular process and catch that signal as an
indication that you need to terminate (perhapse something that is set up
before running your long running process so that it is generic). In windows
Thomas Bartkus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
William Park [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jerry He [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm a little curious, why does most scripting
languges(i.e. python and ruby) use Tcl/Tk rather than
wx or Fox as its standard GUI?
CS Michael Rybak wrote:
That's the problem - or a player input comes in. As I've explained,
this happens a dozen of times per second :(. I've even tried not
checking for player's input after every frame, but do it 3 times more
rare (if framecount % 3 == 0 : process_players_input()). Well,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
What's the difference between time.clock() and time.time()
(and please don't say clock() is the CPU clock and time() is the actual
time because that doesn't help me at all :)
clock (depending on the platform ?) measures the time spent by your program.
Time gives you
In August 2001, there was a thread about the Art of Unit Testing:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_frm/thread/aa2bd17e7f995d05/71a29faf0a0485d5
Paul Moore asked the legitimate question why there is no hook for a
global fixture code that is run only once for the whole
The py.test module offers setup/teardown hooks at the method, class and
module level. The scenario you're describing would be covered at the
module level. See the py.test documentation for more details:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
class TrainingMatrix:
matrix = []
estimator = {}
wordInfo = {}
contextInfo = {}
totalWordsProcessed = 0
numWords = 0
numContexts = 0
matrixWords = 0
Is there some confusion between the scope of the class
object and the scopes of
Shane Hathaway wrote:
time.time() measures real time, while time.clock() measures the time the
CPU dedicates to your program.
I suppose that varies with the platform... help(time.clock) says:
Help on built-in function clock:
clock(...)
clock() - floating point number
Return the
I need to execute a command shell process obtain the return code and
capture stdout from that shell process. I've done this with 2.4 using
subprocess. How do I do it with 2.3?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I need to execute a command shell process obtain the return code and
capture stdout from that shell process. I've done this with 2.4 using
subprocess. How do I do it with 2.3?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I need to execute a command shell process obtain the return code and
capture stdout from that shell process. I've done this with 2.4 using
subprocess. How do I do it with 2.3?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I'm trying to make Windows Media Player visible
and control it from Python. It seems when I call it
below, I get only the console version, and there's
no Visible method like with Internet Explorer.
I do catch events, but I need it visible.
Should it be put into a panel instead?
Should a different
On 1 Aug 2005 06:50:23 -0700, Fuzzyman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This seems to scratch several people's itches.
Care to develop/maintain it ?
Are you talking to me? ;-)
(My news server is having some problem. I saw my post on google groups
but my normal news client isn't seeing it.)
Assuming
I intended to pickle the class instance I call trainer...from my code,
also in the first post:
trainerString = trainDB.read()
trainer = loads(trainerString)
except EOFError:
trainer = TrainingMatrix()
...
trainerString = dumps(trainer)
...
So basically trainer always gets
Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
|I have several python apps (some wxPython, some plain text-mode
| stuff) that I distribute internally for installation on Win32
| machines. They're bundled/installed using py2exe and inno
| setup.
|
| I followed what
Hi, there,
I got different results by running the same lines of code on windows and
debian. Here is the code:
a = kroneckerproduct(ones((4195,1)), identity(12))
print a.mean()
This works perfectly well in windows but it gave the following error while
running it in debian:
Traceback (most
Hello.
my target is implement a function controlla(string - a binary string-)
that check if there is in a string two equal not overlapping
subsequences at least of length limitem:
my code:
[snip]
I may have misunderstood it, but does your function work the way you
want it to?
There is a version of subprocess for 2.3.
http://www.lysator.liu.se/~astrand/popen5/
http://effbot.org/downloads/#subprocess
On Tue, Aug 02, 2005 at 10:05:00AM -0700, chuck wrote:
I need to execute a command shell process obtain the return code and
capture stdout from that shell process. I've
Ed Leafe wrote:
On Monday 01 August 2005 11:56, Terry Reedy wrote:
That is an impossibility. However, there is a middle path between that and
no defensive code. In the present case, you appear to acknowledge a known
easy way to mis-compile wxWidgets from Dabo's viewpoint. If there is a
Björn Lindström [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Christoph Zwerschke [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Would it make sense to add globaleSetup and globalTearDown methods
to the TestCase class? I think at least it would not harm
anybody. Where should such proposals be
Fernando Perez wrote:
plug, but hopefully a useful one
You may want to steal the crash handling code from ipython. In order to
address this kind of problem, ipython sticks an exceptionally verbose
traceback printer into sys.excepthook. If ipython ever crashes, the user gets
a LOT of info,
On Tuesday 02 August 2005 13:40, Fernando Perez wrote:
The point is that something like this:
- gives an experienced user a lot of information to track down the bug if
they feel like it.
- but also gives the raw newbie an easy solution: just mail me that
auto-generated crash file and
Michael Rybak wrote:
CS There's the key. How are you processing network input, specifically
CS retrieving it from the socket?
A sock class has a socket with 0.1 timeout, and every time I
want anything, I call it's read_command() method until it returns
anything. read_command() and
On 2005-08-02, vincent wehren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
|I have several python apps (some wxPython, some plain text-mode
| stuff) that I distribute internally for installation on Win32
| machines. They're
Gregory Piñero [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
|And here is how I make sure I'm always using the right directory in my
scripts:
|
|Put this code at the top:
|import sys
|curdir=os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0])
|#print curdir
|Then I use curdir to build all of the
Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| On 2005-08-02, vincent wehren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb im Newsbeitrag
| news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| |I have several python apps (some wxPython, some plain text-mode
| |
IronPython 0.9 Released(8/2/2005 10:28:41 AM)
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=cf5ae627-5df1-4f8a-ba8b-d64f0676f43fdisplaylang=en
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
If you need something that works both on a frozen app as well as an
(unfrozen) python
script, you'd be better off using something like:
def getAppPrefix():
Return the location the app is running from
isFrozen = False
try:
isFrozen = sys.frozen
except
Paul McNett wrote:
Fernando Perez wrote:
If you are interested, just get ipython and grab the files for this, it's
all
BSD licensed. You can also browse the SVN repo here if you want to look at
the code:
http://ipython.scipy.org/svn/ipython/ipython/trunk/IPython/
The relevant files
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So basically trainer always gets an existing TrainingMatrix(the class)
pickled object if there is a file to read from, otherwise it just makes
a new instance. Either way, the instance trainer is pickled at the end.
Right, but the data you're interested in is contained
Thanks for the link, Grig. I wasn't aware of the py lib so far. The
possibility to create fixtures at the three different scopes is exactly
what I was looking for.
Anyway, I think it would be nice to have that feature in the standard
lib unittest as well. It should not be too hard to add
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi, there,
I got different results by running the same lines of code on windows and
debian. Here is the code:
a = kroneckerproduct(ones((4195,1)), identity(12))
I don't know what this does, but wonder if it uses a lot of memory.
Benji,
Thanks so much, you have saved the day ^_^
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Björn Lindström wrote:
Would it make sense to add globaleSetup and globalTearDown methods
to the TestCase class?
In general that's not such a good idea.
I completely agree and I think it makes a lot of sense that unittest
calls setUp and tearDown for every single test. However, the fact that
Please join us August 10, 7:30-9:00 PM, for the third meeting of the
Fredericksburg, VA Zope and Python User Group (ZPUG).
This meeting has four features of note.
- Brian Lloyd, the author of Python for .Net (http://www.zope.org/
Members/Brian/PythonNet/) and the Zope Corporation VP of
I'm trying to parse html documents from the web, using the HTMLParser
class of the HTMLParser module (python 2.3), but some web documents are
not fully valids. When the parser finds an invalid tag, he raises an
exception. Then it seems impossible to resume the parsing just after
where the
On 2005-08-02, vincent wehren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you are building paths in you code that are relative to
your app,
I'm not using any paths. I use cytpes to load a .dll, and I
don't really know what gnuplot-py is doing, but I think it's
executing a .exe file and talking to it via a
You can also use the spawn functions in os, together with the P_WAIT
mode.
os.spawnlp(os.P_WAIT, 'ls', 'ls')
gconfd-martin kde-martin mcop-martin ssh-PhJzdB6333
gpg-bSRhOE ksocket-martin orbit-martin
0
os.spawnlp(os.P_WAIT, 'spam', 'spam')
127
--
controlla(12345678) - 12345678
thanks everyone. only a question. there is a way to advantage of binary
sequences?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
linuxfreak wrote:
Look at Karrigell. Its a web framework for Python
http://karrigell.sourceforge.net
I second this suggestion.
Karrigell is a pleasure to work with and I'm sure it will appeal any
python fun who dare to play with it.
I also hope Pierre (its developer) lose some of his modesty
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, there,
I got different results by running the same lines of code on windows and
debian. Here is the code:
a = kroneckerproduct(ones((4195,1)), identity(12))
print a.mean()
This works perfectly well in windows but it gave the following error while
running
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