Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info writes:
On Sun, Jul 24, 2011 at 7:29 PM, Shashwat Anand anand.shash...@gmail.com
wrote:
How do I start ?
The idea is to rewrite module by module.
But how to make sure code doesn't break ?
By testing it.
Read up on test driven
Anthony Kong anthony.hw.k...@gmail.com writes:
(My post did not appear in the mailing list, so this is my second try.
Apology if it ends up posted twice)
Hi, all,
If you have read my previous posts to the group, you probably have some idea
why I asked this question.
I am giving a few
James Mills prolo...@shortcircuit.net.au writes:
On Sat, Aug 7, 2010 at 4:32 AM, Tim Chase python.l...@tim.thechases.com
wrote:
I would like to aquint myself with Python Interview questions
This came up a while ago:
http://www.mail-archive.com/python-list@python.org/msg168961.html
Most
candide cand...@free.invalid writes:
Let's the following code :
t=[[0]*2]*3
t
[[0, 0], [0, 0], [0, 0]]
t[0][0]=1
t
[[1, 0], [1, 0], [1, 0]]
Rather surprising, isn't it ?
Not at all, actually.
I'd be surprised if the multiplication operator was aware of object
constructors. Even
Oltmans rolf.oltm...@gmail.com writes:
Greetings Python superstars,
I've a directory structure like following
tests /
__init__.py
testfile.py
testfile.py contains following code
import unittest
class Calculator(unittest.TestCase):
def test_add(self):
print
Paul Rubin no.em...@nospam.invalid writes:
Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de writes:
Well, if multi-core performance is so important here, then there's a pretty
simple thing the OP can do: switch to lxml.
http://blog.ianbicking.org/2008/03/30/python-html-parser-performance/
Well, lxml is
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 10:55:19 -0500, J Kenneth King wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 11:44:29 -0500, J Kenneth King wrote:
A programmer that
lacks critical thinking is a bad
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 11:44:29 -0500, J Kenneth King wrote:
A programmer that
lacks critical thinking is a bad programmer. The language they use has
no bearing on such human facilities.
That's nonsense, and I can demonstrate
Lie Ryan lie.1...@gmail.com writes:
On 12/17/2009 3:17 PM, J Kenneth King wrote:
A language is a thing. It may have syntax and semantics that bias it
towards the conventions and philosophies of its designers. But in the
end, a language by itself would have a hard time convincing a human
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Fri, 11 Dec 2009 19:20:21 -0500, Steve Holden wrote:
Simon Forman wrote:
[...]
As far as the OP rant goes, my $0.02: bad programmers will write bad
code in any language, with any tool or system or environment they're
given.
r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com writes:
J Kenneth King wrote:
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Fri, 11 Dec 2009 19:20:21 -0500, Steve Holden wrote:
snip
Hear, hear!
That's all very well, but some languages and techniques encourage the
programmer to write
Neil Cerutti ne...@norwich.edu writes:
On 2009-12-16, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
The language doesn't encourage anything. It's just a medium
like oil paints and canvas. A painting can be good or bad
despite the medium it is constructed on. The skill of the
painter is what
martin.sch...@gmail.com (Martin Schöön) writes:
First off: I am new here and this is my first post after
lurking for quite some time.
Hi.
Second off: I don't know much Python---yet.
It's not a very big language. If you have experience programming in
other languages, you can probably pick it
Frank Millman fr...@chagford.com writes:
Hi all
I am writing a multi-user business/accounting application. It is getting
rather complex and I am looking at how to, not exactly simplify it, but find
a way to manage the complexity.
I have realised that it is logically made up of a number
shocks benmari...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi
I'm getting back into Python after a long break. I've been developing
large enterprise apps solely with Adobe Flex (ActionScript) for the
past couple years. During that time I've used a number of 'MVC'
frameworks to glue the bits together -
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) writes:
Comparing Go to another computer language -- do you recognize it?
http://www.cowlark.com/2009-11-15-go/
If you skip to the conclusion, you'll be better off.
The author has an interesting point.
Go (the language) is not really ground-breaking.
I don't
astral orange 457r0...@gmail.com writes:
Hi-
I am reading the online tutorial along with a book I bought on Python.
I would like to test out what I know so far by solving programming
challenges. Similar to what O'Reilly Learning Perl has. I really
enjoyed the challenges at the end of the
papa hippo hippost...@gmail.com writes:
On 20 nov, 09:02, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
papa hippo, 19.11.2009 19:53:
The prime goal of 'phileas' is to enable html code to be seamlessly
included in python code in a natural looking syntax, without resorting
to templatng
Benjamin Schollnick bscholln...@gmail.com writes:
Folks,
I'm having some issues here with pyserial trying to translate a perl
script to python... It's probably my inexperience with PySerial
perl that is troubling me...
Can anyone assist?
I'm concerned, since I can't seem to receive
David Cournapeau courn...@gmail.com writes:
On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 10:48 PM, Aaron Watters aaron.watt...@gmail.com
wrote:
I don't think Python and Go address the same set of programmer
desires. For example, Go has a static type system. Some programmers
find static type systems to be
King animator...@gmail.com writes:
Why is it easier than the above mentioned - they are *there* (except the
custom xml), and just can be used. What don't they do you want to do?
Other than that, and even security issues put aside, I don't see much
difference between pickle and python code,
mcherm mch...@gmail.com writes:
On Nov 11, 7:38 pm, Vincent Manis vma...@telus.net wrote:
1. The statement `Python is slow' doesn't make any sense to me.
Python is a programming language; it is implementations that have
speed or lack thereof.
[...]
2. A skilled programmer could build an
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au writes:
On Tue, 03 Nov 2009 10:22:28 -0500, J Kenneth King wrote:
However in this case the procedure by which we derive the value is not
important or even interesting. It is much more succinct to think of the
operation as a value
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au writes:
On Sun, 01 Nov 2009 23:54:16 -0800, Jon P. wrote:
I'd like to do:
resultlist = operandlist1 + operandlist2
where for example
operandlist1=[1,2,3,4,5]
operandlist2=[5,4,3,2,1]
and resultlist will become [6,6,6,6,6].
Aweks a...@ewadev.com writes:
what do you use?
emacs.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu writes:
Rrom:
First look: inside Mozilla's Raindrop messaging platform
http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2009/10/first-look-inside-mozillas-raindrop-messaging-platform.ars
The backend components that are responsible for retrieving and
processing messages
Aaron Watters aaron.watt...@gmail.com writes:
On Oct 16, 10:35 am, mario ruggier mario.rugg...@gmail.com wrote:
On Oct 5, 4:25 pm, Aaron Watters aaron.watt...@gmail.com wrote:
Occasionally I fantasize about making a non-trivial change
to one of these programs, but I strongly resist going
Hendrik van Rooyen hend...@microcorp.co.za writes:
On Friday, 25 September 2009 19:11:06 Torsten Mohr wrote:
I'd like to use a nested structure in memory that consists
of dict()s and list()s, list entries can be dict()s, other list()s,
dict entries can be list()s or other dict()s.
The
ici iltch...@gmail.com writes:
I like shelve for saving small amounts of data, user preferences,
recent files etc.
http://docs.python.org/library/shelve.html
I like it too, but I hear the great powers that be are going to
deprecate it.
For Qt use
I wrote a script to process some files using another program. One thing
I noticed was that both os.listdir() and os.path.walk() will return
unescaped file names (ie: My File With Spaces Stuff instead of My\
File\ With\ Spaces\ \\ Stuff). I haven't had much success finding a
module or recipe
Nobody nob...@nowhere.com writes:
On Wed, 29 Jul 2009 09:29:55 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
I wrote a script to process some files using another program. One thing
I noticed was that both os.listdir() and os.path.walk() will return
unescaped file names (ie: My File With Spaces Stuff
Bryan bryanv...@gmail.com writes:
I have a backup script that runs fine when I run it manually from the
command line. When I run it with cron, the script stops running at
random points in the source code.
The script calls rsync with the subprocess module, which in turn uses
ssh to backup
Robert Kern robert.k...@gmail.com writes:
On 2009-07-16 09:51, J Kenneth King wrote:
jknjkn...@nicorp.f9.co.uk writes:
Google quietly releases open-source NX server ...written in Python,
apparently
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9135504
Friðrik Már Jónsson frid...@pyth.net writes:
ma wrote:
filter(lambda x: x, your_list)
Good call! Equivalent but more efficient:
filter(None, your_list)
Regards,
Friðrik Már
I was wondering when someone would mention filter()
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Dr Mephesto dnh...@googlemail.com writes:
I have been following the discussion about python and pyobjc on the
iphone, and it seemed to me that the app-store rules prohibited
embedded interpreters; so, python apps are a no-no.
But now it seems that the Rubyists have the option that we don't.
Dr Mephesto dnh...@googlemail.com writes:
Sure, I am learning Objective C already, but the syntax is really
unfriendly after python.
I think it really depends on the type of app you want to write.
Anything held back by network delays or that sits around waiting for
user input are perfectly
Stef Mientki stef.mien...@gmail.com writes:
So, the question is, can the same thing be done for Python apps?
I love Python and all, but it'd be apt to ask, what's the point?
The iPhone is running on what? A 400Mhz ARM processor? Resources on the
device are already limited; running
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) writes:
In article mailman.2639.1246802753.8015.python-l...@python.org,
Hendrik van Rooyen m...@microcorp.co.za wrote:
But wait - maybe if he passes an iterator around - the equivalent of
for char in input_stream... Still no good though, unless the next call
to the
masher vertesp...@gmail.com writes:
My questions, then, is: Is there a more elegant/pythonic way of doing
what I am trying to do with the current Pool class?
Forgive me, I may not fully understand what you are trying to do here
(I've never really used multiprocessing all that much)...
But
masher vertesp...@gmail.com writes:
On Jul 2, 12:06 pm, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
masher vertesp...@gmail.com writes:
My questions, then, is: Is there a more elegant/pythonic way of doing
what I am trying to do with the current Pool class?
Forgive me, I may not fully
per perfr...@gmail.com writes:
hi all,
i'm looking for a native python package to run a very simple data
base. i was originally using cpickle with dictionaries for my problem,
but i was making dictionaries out of very large text files (around
1000MB in size) and pickling was simply too
Piet van Oostrum p...@cs.uu.nl writes:
J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com (JKK) wrote:
JKK I find that it does work, but unlike SLIME for lisp, it just imports the
statement.
JKK It confused me at first, but basically the interpreter doesn't provide
JKK any feedback to emacs.
JKK Try
Lacrima lacrima.ma...@gmail.com writes:
I am new to python.
And now I am using trial version of Wing IDE.
But nobody mentioned it as a favourite editor.
So should I buy it when trial is expired or there are better choices?
That is a slightly better question.
Try some of the free
Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com writes:
Kalyan Chakravarthy wrote:
Hi All,
can any one suggest me which database I can use for my
small application(to store user names ,passwords, very few other
data.. )
I am using Python, Google Apps and guide me how to connect to
Giovanni Gherdovich giovanni.gherdov...@sophia.inria.fr writes:
Hello everybody,
basically I'm writing here since I cannot
make my python.el work (a major mode for writing
python with emacs), but I would also like to share
my user experience and tell you what I think
an emacs mode should
LittleGrasshopper seattleha...@yahoo.com writes:
With so many choices, I was wondering what editor is the one you
prefer when coding Python, and why. I normally use vi, and just got
into Python, so I am looking for suitable syntax files for it, and
extra utilities. I dabbled with emacs at
John Nagle na...@animats.com writes:
This really isn't the fault of the feedparser module, but it's
worth mentioning.
I have an application which needs to read each new item from a feed
as it shows up, as efficiently as possible, because it's monitoring multiple
feeds. I want
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Thu, 07 May 2009 13:28:10 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au writes:
On Wed, 06 May 2009 09:48:51 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com writes:
On 5/5
Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu writes:
J Kenneth King wrote:
Keep in mind that nested comprehensions are still available because
they do have a use case that justifies their existence.
Nested comprehensions are available because because the syntax makes
them available by default and making
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au writes:
On Wed, 06 May 2009 09:48:51 -0400, J Kenneth King wrote:
Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com writes:
On 5/5/2009 9:15 AM J Kenneth King said...
List comprehensions can make a reader of your code apprehensive
because it can read
James rent.lupin.r...@gmail.com writes:
Hello all,
I'm working on some NLP code - what I'm doing is passing a large
number of tokens through a number of filtering / processing steps.
The filters take a token as input, and may or may not yield a token as
a result. For example, I might have
Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com writes:
On 5/5/2009 9:15 AM J Kenneth King said...
List comprehensions can make a reader of your code apprehensive
because it can read like a run-on sentence and thus be difficult to
parse. The Python documentation discourages their use and I believe
Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com writes:
On 5/1/2009 7:31 AM J Kenneth King said...
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
b = []
for pair in a:
for item in pair:
b.append(item)
This is much more clear than a nested comprehension.
I love comprehensions, but abusing them can
Iain King iaink...@gmail.com writes:
On May 5, 7:00 am, Joel Juvenal Rivera Rivera joel...@gmail.com
wrote:
I want to make something very similar to the command tail -f (follow a
file), i have been trying with some while True and some microsleeps
(about .1 s); did someone has already done
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 5:56 PM, Ross ross.j...@gmail.com wrote:
If I have a list of tuples a = [(1,2), (3,4), (5,6)], and I want to
return a new list of each individual element in these tuples, I can do
it with a nested for loop but when I try to do it
Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au writes:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2009 23:51:18 -0700, namekuseijin wrote:
On Apr 26, 1:31 am, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Fri, 24 Apr 2009 21:01:10 -0700, Carl Banks wrote:
That's because Python lists aren't
Luis Zarrabeitia ky...@uh.cu writes:
On Monday 20 April 2009 11:29:19 am J Kenneth King wrote:
Changing the ID value would break things on the server, so I
wanted to write the interface class to respect those conventions.
Then, take this opportunity fix the server and prevent it from
Luis Zarrabeitia ky...@uh.cu writes:
On Wednesday 22 April 2009 01:44:38 pm J Kenneth King wrote:
Then, take this opportunity fix the server and prevent it from breaking
once you change the ID, because:
Unfortunately it's not my server to fix. I can suggest a patch, but
that's it.
Yes
Carl Banks pavlovevide...@gmail.com writes:
On Apr 17, 4:00 pm, Scott David Daniels scott.dani...@acm.org wrote:
Carl Banks wrote:
On Apr 17, 10:21 am, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
Consider:
code
Consider:
code:
class MyInterface(object):
def __get_id(self):
return self.__id
id = property(fget=__get_id)
def __init__(self, id, foo):
self.__id = id
self.foo = foo
class
hyperboreean hyperbore...@nerdshack.com writes:
From: hyperboreean hyperbore...@nerdshack.com
Subject: decorators don't play nice with nose?
Newsgroups: comp.lang.python
To: python-list@python.org
Date: Mon, 06 Apr 2009 11:01:04 +0300
Hi, I am trying to test the business part of a web
Tino Wildenhain t...@living-examples.com writes:
Hi Mike,
Mike wrote:
Hello all,
I'm writing a web app and wanted to do some html generation (I
really do not like to maintain or write html).
I'm thinking of writing a dsl based on the following:
def html():
return
def a():
Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de writes:
J Kenneth King wrote:
from tags import html, head, meta, title, body, div, p, a
mypage = html(
head(
meta(attrs={'http-equiv': Content-Type,
'content': text/html
At the risk of sounding like I don't know what I'm doing, I must say
that I am finding it rather difficult/tedious to mock the xmlrpclib
interface using minimock.
I refuse to believe that I'm the only developer to have tried this
before, but google isn't being my friend and I can't seem to get
Richard Jones richardjo...@optushome.com.au writes:
I'm proud to release version 1.4.7 of Roundup.
- Allow CGI frontend to serve XMLRPC requests.
- Added XMLRPC actions, as well as bridging CGI actions to XMLRPC actions.
Sweet.
I'm working on a small project called TracShell which is a
Fab86 fabien.h...@gmail.com writes:
On Mar 5, 5:23 pm, Marco Mariani ma...@sferacarta.com wrote:
Fab86 wrote:
Is it possible to get the program to catch the exception, wait 10
seconds, then carry of from where it was rather than starting again?
something like this? probably works in
already helped a lot by submitting
patches.
Bug reports, feature requests, comments and critiques are encouraged!
All the best,
J Kenneth King
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au writes:
On 17Feb2009 15:12, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
| I recently started a project called TracShell
| (http://code.google.com/p/tracshell) where I make heavy use of the
| xmlrpclib core module.
|
| When the number of RPC calls was small
Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar writes:
En Tue, 17 Feb 2009 21:12:57 -0200, J Kenneth King
ja...@agentultra.com escribió:
I recently started a project called TracShell
(http://code.google.com/p/tracshell) where I make heavy use of the
xmlrpclib core module.
When the number
I recently started a project called TracShell
(http://code.google.com/p/tracshell) where I make heavy use of the
xmlrpclib core module.
When the number of RPC calls was small, wrapping each call in try/except
was acceptable. However, this obviously will duplicate code all over the
place. There
J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com writes:
I tend to work a lot with Trac for project management and have always
found the browser interface to be a productivity killer. I always
wanted a simple command-line interface to Trac, but having never found
one I found a little free time and got off
gc_ott...@yahoo.ca writes:
..I come from Delphi, and compared to Delphi, even Visual Studio
vanishes ;-)
...I don't even notice the difference between Delphi (which
I'm still using)
and wxPython.
I think this story happened to other people to,
so instead of putting a lot of
I tend to work a lot with Trac for project management and have always
found the browser interface to be a productivity killer. I always
wanted a simple command-line interface to Trac, but having never found
one I found a little free time and got off my laurels to make one.
TracShell 0.1 is an
Krzysztof Retel krzysztof.re...@googlemail.com writes:
On 12 Feb, 14:06, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
I tend to work a lot with Trac for project management and have always
found the browser interface to be a productivity killer. I always
wanted a simple command-line interface
azrael jura.gro...@gmail.com writes:
To be honest, in compare to Visual Studio, Gui Builders for wx
widgets are really bad.
That's because Visual Studio is a Microsoft product to build
interfaces for Microsoft products.
wx on the other hand is cross platform and ergo, much more
complicated.
Bruno Desthuilliers bdesth.quelquech...@free.quelquepart.fr writes:
Gilles Ganault a écrit :
Hello
If I wanted to build some social web site such as Facebook, what do
frameworks like Django or TurboGears provide over writing a site from
scratch using Python?
Quite a lot of abstractions
mk mrk...@gmail.com writes:
Hello everybody,
Any better solution than this?
def flatten(x):
res = []
for el in x:
if isinstance(el,list):
res.extend(flatten(el))
else:
res.append(el)
return res
a = [1, 2, 3, [4, 5, 6], [[7, 8], [9,
Matimus mccre...@gmail.com writes:
On Feb 4, 8:08 am, Gilles Ganault nos...@nospam.com wrote:
Hello
If I wanted to build some social web site such as Facebook, what do
frameworks like Django or TurboGears provide over writing a site from
scratch using Python?
Thank you for your feedback.
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
Python 2.6 (r26:66714, Nov 18 2008, 21:48:52)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5484)] on darwin
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information.
bool(-1)
True
str.find() returns -1 on failure (i.e. if the substring is not in the
given
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
Python 2.6 (r26:66714, Nov 18 2008, 21:48:52)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5484)] on darwin
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information.
bool(-1)
True
str.find() returns -1 on failure (i.e. if the substring is not in the
given
Stephen Hansen apt.shan...@gmail.com writes:
str.find() returns -1 on failure (i.e. if the substring is not in the
given string).
-1 is considered boolean true by Python.
That's an odd little quirk... never noticed that before.
I just use regular expressions myself.
Wouldn't this be
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
Python 2.6 (r26:66714, Nov 18 2008, 21:48:52)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5484)] on darwin
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information.
bool(-1)
True
str.find() returns -1 on failure (i.e. if the substring is not in the
given
Chris Rebert c...@rebertia.com writes:
Python 2.6 (r26:66714, Nov 18 2008, 21:48:52)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5484)] on darwin
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information.
bool(-1)
True
str.find() returns -1 on failure (i.e. if the substring is not in the
given
excord80 excor...@gmail.com writes:
I need to make a small, relatively low-traffic site that users can
create accounts on and log into. Scripts must run as cgi (no
mod_python or FastCGI is available). Can anyone recommend a small and
simple web framework for Python, maybe similar to Perl's
Linuxguy123 linuxguy...@gmail.com writes:
I just started using python last week and I'm addicted.
I hate Perl. I never did learn to use it with any competence. I has to
be the most obfuscated, cryptic language I've ever seen. Making it
object oriented only makes it worse !
.. snip ..
I
J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com writes:
Linuxguy123 linuxguy...@gmail.com writes:
I just started using python last week and I'm addicted.
I hate Perl. I never did learn to use it with any competence. I has to
be the most obfuscated, cryptic language I've ever seen. Making it
object
Spoofy spoo...@gmx.net writes:
.. snip ..
2.
For maintaining the character attributes I creates a seperate class. I
wonder weather this is an overuse of OO (instead of just making the
attributes plain variables of the Char class) and if the way I wrote
this is OK (somehow this looks cool
MatthewS schaefer...@gmail.com writes:
I'd like to know if the following behavior is expected and can be
avoided: I have a Pyro server object that maintains a queue of work,
and multiple Pyro worker objects that take work off the queue by
calling a method on the server (get_work) and then
Jonathan Gardner jgard...@jonathangardner.net writes:
On Jan 7, 9:16 am, Chris Mellon arka...@gmail.com wrote:
The OP wants a Ruby-style DSL by which he means something that lets
me write words instead of expressions. The ruby syntax is amenable to
this, python (and lisp, for that matter)
Kay Schluehr kay.schlu...@gmx.net writes:
On 8 Jan., 16:25, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
As another poster mentioned, eventually PyPy will be done and then
you'll get more of an in-Python DSL.
May I ask why you consider it as important that the interpreter is
written
Jonathan Gardner jgard...@jonathangardner.net writes:
On Jan 6, 12:24 pm, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
Jonathan Gardner jgard...@jonathangardner.net writes:
On Jan 6, 8:18 am, sturlamolden sturlamol...@yahoo.no wrote:
On Jan 6, 4:32 pm, mark mark.fi...@googlemail.com wrote
Kay Schluehr kay.schlu...@gmx.net writes:
On 7 Jan., 16:50, J Kenneth King ja...@agentultra.com wrote:
Python expressions are not
data types either and hence no macros -- I can't write a python function
that generates python code at compile time.
Have you ever considered
Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar writes:
En Mon, 05 Jan 2009 02:03:26 -0200, Roy Smith r...@panix.com escribió:
The other day, I came upon this gem. It's a bit of perl embedded in a
Makefile; this makes it even more gnarly because all the $'s get
doubled to
hide them from make:
Li Han lihang9...@gmail.com writes:
Hi! I know little about the computer image processing, and now I have
a fancy problem which is how to read the time from the picture of a
clock by programming ? Is there anyone who can give me some
suggestions?
Thank!
Li Han
I do work in object
Jonathan Gardner jgard...@jonathangardner.net writes:
On Jan 6, 8:18 am, sturlamolden sturlamol...@yahoo.no wrote:
On Jan 6, 4:32 pm, mark mark.fi...@googlemail.com wrote:
I want to implement a internal DSL in Python. I would like the syntax
as human readable as possible.
Also beware
Tokyo Dan huff...@tokyo.email.ne.jp writes:
If your were going to program a game in python what technologies would
you use?
The game is a board game with some piece animations, but no movement
animation...think of a chess king exploding. The game runs in a
browser in a window of a social
Kottiyath n.kottiy...@gmail.com writes:
I have the following list of tuples:
L = [(1, 2), (3, 4, 5), (6, 7)]
I want to loop through the list and extract the values.
The only algorithm I could think of is:
for i in l:
... u = None
... try:
... (k, v) = i
... except ValueError:
...
Paul Rubin http://phr...@nospam.invalid writes:
Kottiyath n.kottiy...@gmail.com writes:
I have the following list of tuples:
L = [(1, 2), (3, 4, 5), (6, 7)]
I want to loop through the list and extract the values.
Others have suggested messy ways to code what you're asking. At another
Gilles Ganault nos...@nospam.com writes:
Hi
I'd like to rewrite a Web 2.0 PHP application in Python with AJAX, and
it seems like Django and Turbogears are the frameworks that have the
most momentum.
I'd like to use this opportunity to lower the load on servers, as the
PHP application
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (R. Bernstein) writes:
This release is to clear out some old issues. It contains some
bugfixes, document corrections, and enhancements. Tests were
revised for Python 2.6 and Python without readline installed. A bug
involving invoking from ipython was fixed. The frame command
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