Hello all,
I'm happy to announce the release of pyOpenSSL 0.13. With this release,
pyOpenSSL now supports OpenSSL 1.0. Additionally, pyOpenSSL now works
with PyPy.
Apart from those two major developments, the following interesting
changes have been made since the last release:
* (S)erve
Exciting news everyone,
I have just released pyOpenSSL 0.12. pyOpenSSL provides Python bindings
to a number of OpenSSL APIs, including certificates, public and private
keys, and of course running TLS (SSL) over sockets or arbitrary in-
memory buffiers.
This release fixes an incompatibility
Greetings fellow Pythoneers,
I'm happy to announce that pyOpenSSL 0.14 is now available.
pyOpenSSL is a set of Python bindings for OpenSSL. It includes some
low-level cryptography APIs but is primarily focused on providing an API
for using the TLS protocol from Python.
Check out the PyPI pa
Hello,
I'm pleased to announce the release of Nevow 0.11.1.
Nevow is a web application construction kit written in Python and based
on Twisted. It is designed to allow the programmer to express as much of
the view logic as desired in Python, and includes a pure Python XML
expression syntax na
On 11:15 am, [email protected] wrote:
On 22 Nov, 05:10, [email protected] wrote:
"tail -f" is implemented by sleeping a little bit and then reading to
see if there's anything new.
This was the apparent assertion behind the "99 Bottles" concurrency
example:
http://wiki.python.org/moi
On 05:05 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Thanks for the help, but it doesn't work. All I get is an error like:
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character '\\u0107' in
position 0: ordinal not in range(128)
It does work in Terminal interactively, after I import the sys module.
But
On 12:18 am, [email protected] wrote:
Christopher Armstrong wrote:
= Twisted 9.0.0 =
I'm happy to announce Twisted 9, the first (and last) release of
Twisted in 2009. The previous release was Twisted 8.2 in December of
2008. Given that, a lot has changed!
This release supports Python 2.3 throug
On 02:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Is there away in python i can connect to a server in socket to two
servers at the same time or can't it be done?
I'm not sure what you're asking. Can you clarify?
Jean-Paul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 08:45 am, [email protected] wrote:
Tom Machinski wrote:
In most cases, `list(generator)` works as expected. Thus,
`list()` is generally equivalent to `[]`.
Here's a minimal case where this equivalence breaks, causing a serious
and hard-to-detect bug in a program:
>>> def sit(): raise StopI
On 08:18 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 14:35:21 +, exarkun wrote:
StopIteration is intended to be used only within the .__next__ method
of
iterators. The devs know that other 'off-label' use results in the
inconsistency you noted, but their a
On 02:50 am, [email protected] wrote:
On 12/14/2009 9:45 AM, [email protected] wrote:
On 08:18 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 14:35:21 +, exarkun wrote:
StopIteration is intended to be used only within the .__next__
method of
iterators. The
On 04:11 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 22:45:58 +, exarkun wrote:
On 08:18 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 14:35:21 +, exarkun wrote:
StopIteration is intended to be used only within the .__next__
method
of
On 06:46 am, [email protected] wrote:
On 12/13/2009 10:29 PM, [email protected] wrote:
Doesn't matter. Sometimes it makes sense to call it directly.
It only makes sense to call next (or .__next__) when you are prepared
to explicitly catch StopIteration within a try..except construct.
On 02:58 pm, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] wrote:
On 08:45 am, [email protected] wrote:
Tom Machinski wrote:
In most cases, `list(generator)` works as expected. Thus,
`list()` is generally equivalent to
`[
expression>]`.
Here's a minimal case where this equivalence breaks,
On 06:00 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 12/14/2009 10:21 AM, [email protected] wrote:
I'm asking about why the behavior of a StopIteration exception being
handled from the `expression` of a generator expression to mean "stop
the loop" is accepted by "the devs" as acceptable.
Any unhand
On 09:15 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi All,
I have this simple function:
def execute(command):
process = Popen(command.split(),stderr=STDOUT,stdout=PIPE)
return process.communicate()[0]
..but my unit test for it fails:
from testfixtures import tempdir,compare
from unittest impo
On 09:56 pm, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] wrote:
How can I get this to be the case?
You probably just need to flush stdout and stderr after each write.
You set them up to go to the same underlying file descriptor, but they
still each have independent buffering on t
On 04:22 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hello,
what would be best practise for speeding up a larger number of http-get
requests done via urllib? Until now they are made in sequence, each
request taking up to one second. The results must be merged into a
list, while the original sequence needs no
On 04:26 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hello people,
I have 5 directories corresponding 5 different urls .I want to
download
images from those urls and place them in the respective directories.I
have
to extract the contents and download them simultaneously.I can extract
the
contents
On 06:33 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi Python gurus,
I'm quite new to Python and have a problem. Following code resides in
a file named test.py
---
import unittest
class result(unittest.TestResult):
pass
class tee(unittest.TestCase):
def test_first(self):
print 'first te
On 08:15 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 14 Jan 2010 19:19:53 GMT
Duncan Booth wrote:
> ishex2 = lambda s: not(set(s)-set(string.hexdigits)) # Yours
> ishex3 = lambda s: not set(s)-set(string.hexdigits) # Mine
>
> I could actually go three better:
>
> ishex3=lambda s:not set(s)-set(strin
On 07:03 pm, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] (Aahz) writes:
From my POV, your question would be precisely identical if you had
started your project when Python 2.3 was just released and wanted to
know if the libraries you selected would be available for Python 2.6.
I didn't
On 10:07 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Jan 27, 12:56�pm, John Nagle wrote:
Arguably, Python 3 has been rejected by the market.
No it's not fathomably arguable, because there's no reasonable way
that Python 3 could have fully replaced Python 2 so quickly.
At best, you could reasonabl
On 10:50 am, [email protected] wrote:
Suppose we have a program that writes its process id into a pid file.
Usually the program deletes the pid file when it exists... But in
some cases (for example, killed with kill -9 or TerminateProcess) pid
file is left there. I would like to know if a
On 07:28 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 2010-01-28, Big Stu wrote:
I'm hoping someone on here can point me to an example of a python
package that is a great example of how to put it all together. I'm
hoping for example code that demonstrates:
Surely most of the Standard Library should satisf
On 07:49 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Have you actually looked at any of the standard library?
Jean-Paul
I'm looking at urllib2 right now and it is covering a bunch of the
bases I'm looking for. And grepping in the /usr/lib/python2.5/ folder
for import statements on various things I'm i
On 02:10 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 5:30 AM, andrew cooke
wrote:
Is there any way to change the name of the function in an error
message? �In the example below I'd like the error to refer to bar(),
for example (the motivation is related function decorators - I'd like
t
On 25 Sep, 02:26 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi folks. I just modified the WHIFF concepts index page
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1000.concepts
To include the following paragraph with a startling and arrogant
claim in the final sentence :)
"""
Developers build WHIFF app
On 25 Sep, 05:25 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Sep 24, 7:54�pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 07:10 am, [email protected] wrote:
>On Sep 23, 5:57�pm, [email protected] wrote:
>[snip]
[snip]
If you have a function that takes 5 minutes to run, then you're
blocking
the
On 10:40 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Due to an ftp server issue, my python script sometimes hangs whilst
downloading, unable to receive any more data. Is there any way that I
could have python check, maybe through a thread or something, whether
it has hanged (or just, if it's still active after 10
On 25 Sep, 01:25 pm, [email protected] wrote:
In the following chunk of code the CLIENT receives both the results
from 1Ccompute 1D at the same time (i.e. when the second one has
finished). This way it cannot start 1CelaborateResult 1D on the first
result while the SERVER is still running
On 06:06 am, [email protected] wrote:
Jean-Paul, thanks a lot for your patient.
I have read most of a the 1CThe Twisted Documentation 1D which I think is
very good for Deferred and ok for PB but it is really lacking on the
Reactor. In my case it looks like this is key to achieve what I ha
On 05:46 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 1:22 AM, Lanny
wrote:
I've been thinking about putting together a text based RPG written
fully in Python, possibly expanding to a MUD system. I'd like to know
if anyone feels any kind of need for this thing or if I'd be wasting
my ti
On 1 Oct, 09:28 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hello
I recently asked how to pull companies' ID from an SQLite
database,
have multiple instances of a Python script download each company's web
page from a remote server, eg. www.acme.com/company.php?id=1, and use
regexes to extract some in
On 01:36 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 6:33 PM, wrote:
On 1 Oct, 09:28 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hello
I recently asked how to pull companies' ID from an SQLite
database,
have multiple instances of a Python script download each company's
web
page from a rem
On 05:48 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Fri, 02 Oct 2009 01:33:18 -, [email protected] declaimed
the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
There's no need to use threads for this. Have a look at Twisted:
http://twistedmatrix.com/trac/
Strange... While I can easil
On 11 Oct, 10:53 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I've been programming since about 3 years, and come to think of it
never
written anything large. I know a few languages: c, python, perl, java.
Right
now, I just write little IRC bots that basically don't do anything.
I have two questions:
1) W
On 03:17 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
If I define my own class and use pickle to serialize the objects in
this class, will the serialized object be successfully read in later
version of python.
What if I serialize (using pickle) an object of a class defined in
python library, will it be s
On 02:48 pm, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] wrote:
On 03:17 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
If I define my own class and use pickle to serialize the objects in
this class, will the serialized object be successfully read in later
version of python.
What if I serialize (usi
On 08:13 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Yuvgoog Greenle schrieb:
Is there a way that Python and C can have a shared definition for a
binary data structure?
It could be nice if:
1. struct or ctypes had a function that could parse a .h/.c/.cpp file
to auto-generate constructors
or
2. a ctypes def
On 25 Oct, 11:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I am very much new to Python, and one of my first projects is a simple
data-based website. I am starting with Python 3.1 (I can hear many of
you shouting "don't - start with 2.6"), but as far as I can see, none
of the popular python-to-web fr
On 09:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
In article ,
Robert Kern wrote:
I like using pyflakes. It catches most of these kinds of typo errors,
but is
much faster than pylint or pychecker.
Coincidentally, I tried PyFlakes yesterday and was unimpressed with the
way it doesn't work with "imp
On 01:18 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Nov 7, 5:05�pm, sturlamolden wrote:
On 7 Nov, 03:46, gil_johnson wrote:>
> I don't have the code with me, but for huge arrays, I have used
> something like:
> >>> arr[0] = initializer
> >>> for i in range N:
> >>> � � �arr.extend(arr)
> This d
On 12:40 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Nov 8, 4:27�am, Carl Banks wrote:
It doesn't sound like the thread is communicating with the process
much. �Therefore:
There is quite a bit of communication -- the computation results are
visulized while they are generated.
I'm curious how this visualiz
I'm happy to announce the release of pyOpenSSL 0.10.
pyOpenSSL 0.10 exposes several more OpenSSL APIs, including support for
running TLS connections over in-memory BIOs, access to the OpenSSL
random number generator, the ability to pass subject and issuer
parameters when creating an X509Extens
On 04:00 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Mike wrote:
I'll apologize first for this somewhat lengthy example. It does
however recreate the problem I've run into. This is stripped-down code
from a much more meaningful system.
I have two example classes, "AutoChecker" and "Snapshot" that evaluate
vari
On 02:02 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to use logical operators (or, and) with the "in" statement,
but I'm having some problems to understand their behavior.
"and" and "or" have no particular interaction with "in".
In [1]: l = ['3', 'no3', 'b3']
In [2]: '3' in l
Out[2]: True
On 07:53 pm, [email protected] wrote:
In article ,
Peng Yu wrote:
It's not clear to me whether WindowsError is available on linux or
not, after I read the document.
Here's what I told a co-worker to do yesterday:
if os.name == 'nt':
DiskError = (OSError, WindowsError)
else:
DiskEr
On 10:10 am, [email protected] wrote:
Disclaimer: this is for exploring and debugging only. Really.
I can check type or __class__ in the interactive interpreter:
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71600, Jun 16 2009, 16:49:04)
[GCC 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-44)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits
On 02:43 am, [email protected] wrote:
I'm trying to simply imitate what "tail -f" does, i.e. read a file,
wait
until it's appended to and process the new data, but apparently I'm
missing something.
The code is:
54 f = file(filename, "r", 1)
55 f.seek(-1000, os.SEEK_END)
56 ff = fcnt
On 08:36 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Tue, Feb 2, 2010 at 3:14 PM, Mitchell L Model
wrote:
I need a 1000 x 1000 two-dimensional array of objects. (Since they are
instances of application classes it appears that the array module is
useless;
Did you try it with an array object using
On 11:02 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I know there's a performance penalty for running Python on a
multicore CPU, but how bad is it? I've read the key paper
("www.dabeaz.com/python/GIL.pdf"), of course. It would be adequate
if the GIL just limited Python to running on one CPU at a time,
but
On 01:56 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hi everyone,
Is there an easy way to merge stdin and stdout? For instance suppose I
have script that prompts for a number and prints the number. If you
execute this with redirection from a file say input.txt with 42 in the
file, then executing
./my
On 04:43 pm, [email protected] wrote:
The main part of my script is a function that does many long reads
(urlopen, it's looped). Since I'm hell-bent on employing SIGINFO to
display some stats, I needed to run foo() as a seperate thread to
avoid getting errno 4 (interrupted system call) errors (w
On 06:53 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to find a way to create an asynchronous HTTP client so I
can get responses from web servers in a way like
async_http_open('http://example.com/', callback_func)
# immediately continues, and callback_func is called with response
as arg w
On 02:40 pm, [email protected] wrote:
2010/3/7
On 06:53 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to find a way to create an asynchronous HTTP client so I
can get responses from web servers in a way like
async_http_open('http://example.com/', callback_func)
# immediately contin
On 06:52 am, [email protected] wrote:
but when I try running the test, I get an error:
$ python test_unicode_interpolation.py
Options: {'delimiter': None}
str of options.delimiter = None
repr of options.delimiter = None
len of options.delimiter
Traceback (most recent call las
On 01:14 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hi, I could use some advice on my project.
It's a browser-based MMOG: "The High Seas" (working title)
Basically it is a trading game set in 1600s or 1700s ... inspirations:
Patrician 3, Mine Things, Space Rangers 2, ...
Travel between cities takes severa
On 09:24 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, 11 Apr 2010 10:13:16 +0200, Martin v. Loewis wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
How do I leave comments on PyPI? There's a checkbox "Allow comments
on
releases" which I have checked, but no obvious way to actually post a
comment.
Yo
On 04:51 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I'm converting some code from M2Crypto to the new "ssl" module, and
I've found what looks like a security hole. The "ssl" module will
validate the certificate chain, but it doesn't check that the
certificate
is valid for the domain.
Here's the basic
On 05:49 pm, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] wrote:
On 04:51 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I'm converting some code from M2Crypto to the new "ssl" module,
and
I've found what looks like a security hole. The "ssl" module will
validate the certificate chain, but it doesn't
On 10:02 am, [email protected] wrote:
Say, a Standard Library function works in a way it was not supposed
to.
Developers (who use Python) handle this issue themselves.
And then, you (a python-core developer) fix the behavior of the
function.
Although you have 1Cfixed 1D the bug, anyone
On 7 May, 07:25 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 7 May 2010 15:36, Giampaolo Rodol� wrote:
You can easily avoid this by setting a lower timeout when calling
asyncore.loop(), like 1 second or less (for example, Twisted uses
0.001 secs).
Thanks, that's what I was considering.
This is a good
On 07:48 am, [email protected]_zealand wrote:
In message ,
[email protected] wrote:
This is a good example of why it's a bad idea to use select on
Windows.
Instead, use WaitForMultipleObjects.
How are you supposed to write portable code, then?
With WaitForMultipleObjects on
On 11:47 am, [email protected] wrote:
2010/5/7 Antoine Pitrou :
Le Fri, 07 May 2010 21:55:15 +0200, Giampaolo Rodol� a �crit�:
Of course, but 30 seconds look a little bit too much to me, also
because
(I might be wrong here) I noticed that a smaller timeout seems to
result
in better performan
On 08:13 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I know how to use timeit and/or profile to measure the current run-time
cost of some code.
I want to record the time used by some original implementation, then
after I rewrite it, I want to find out if I made stuff faster or
slower,
and by how much.
Other t
On 01:42 am, [email protected] wrote:
On 5/21/2010 7:22 PM, Zac Burns wrote:
Why can't I inherit from traceback to 'spoof' tracebacks?
Because a) they are, at least in part, an internal implementation
detail of CPython,
But you can just say this about anything, since there is no Python
spec
On 04:31 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On May 25, 5:47�pm, "[email protected]" wrote:
On May 25, 5:23�pm, Michele Simionato
wrote:
> On May 25, 2:56�pm, "[email protected]" wrote:
> > Could you please provide me with a simple example how to do this
with
> > threads.
> > I don't know where to
On 03:23 pm, [email protected] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi there,
I need to implement the following:
sending SOAP requests and receiving SOAP responses
over HTTPS with
- authentication based on client-certificates _and_ basic authorization
- verification of the serve
On 06:58 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Jun 3, 10:47�am, Nathan Huesken wrote:
Hi,
I am writing a network application which needs from time to time do
file transfer (I am writing the server as well as the client).
For simple network messages, I use pyro because it is very
comfortable.
But
On 08:01 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Admittedly not the strongest reason, but yet an important one,
for switching from Matlab to python/numpy/scipy/matplotlib,
is that Matlab is very cumbersome to run in batch.
Now I discover that some of the matplotlib.pyplot functions
(incl. plot and c
On 12:26 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I am using ubuntu 9.10 . I just installed python 2.6.1 in
/opt/python2.6 for using it with wingide for debugging symbols. I also
installed numpy in python 2.6.1 using -- prefix method. but when i
import numpy i get following error :
ImportError:
On 07:01 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I have a class which looks like the one below.
What I'm trying to accomplish is to "wrap" all my method calls and
attribute lookups into a "proxy" method which translates certain
exceptions into others.
The code below *apparently* works: the original met
On 04:25 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
No, I think your code is very simple. You can save a few lines by
writing
it like this:
s = input('enter two numbers: ')
t = s.split()
print(int(t[0]) + int(t[1])) # no need for temporary variables a and
b
Not that we're playing
Hello all,
I'm happy to announce the initial release of python-signalfd. This
simple package wraps the sigprocmask(2) and signalfd(2) calls, useful
for interacting with POSIX signals in slightly more advanced ways than
can be done with the built-in signal module.
You can find the package on
Hello all,
I'm happy to announce the initial release of filepath.
filepath is an abstract interface to the filesystem. It provides APIs
for path name manipulation and for inspecting and modifying the
filesystem (for example, renaming files, reading from them, etc).
filepath's APIs are intend
On 12:50 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 8:00 AM, dmitrey
wrote:
hi all,
is it possible to overload operator "< �<"? (And other like this one,
eg "<= �<=", "> �>", ">= �>=")
Any URL/example?
Thank you in advance, D.
That isn't an operator at all. Python does not supp
On 04:34 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
How can we access serial port using usb-serial converters,using python
in
linux.I want to further use pyGTK for Gui development after accessing
serial
data.
Twisted supports serial ports and has good Gtk integration.
http://twistedmatrix.com/p
On 03:35 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Hi,
I am writing a HTTP client in Twisted. The client contacts the
server, and any errors in the sent messages will be returned back to
the client in 400 message. The reason for failure at the server is
sent as the text in the 400 message. I tried the sa
On 11 Aug, 11:37 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I will not take an opinion on whether Python's documentation is ideal
(more on why below) but I will opine that the conclusion doesn't
follow from your premise. People's expectations of what documentation
should be are too different, there wi
On 01:27 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Simon Brunning wrote:
2009/8/11 Robert Dailey :
On Aug 11, 3:40 pm, Bearophile wrote:
There are gals too here.
It's a figure of speech. And besides, why would I want programming
advice from a woman? lol. Thanks for the help.
Give the attitudes sti
On 01:38 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Friday 14 August 2009 12:54:32 Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
How about using pyserial? With that, I never had any problems
accessing
the the serial ports, and AFAIK no duplex-problems as well. And I
seriously doubt that these are a python-related probl
On 02:19 pm, inva...@invalid wrote:
On 2009-08-14, [email protected]
wrote:
One strategy you might employ to get rid of the busy looping
is to use Twisted and its serial port support. This also
addresses the full- duplex issue you've raised.
There are no such full-dulex issues.
The
On 01:23 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:35 PM, sturlamolden
wrote:
A compiler could easily recognise a statement like
� for i in range(n):
as a simple integer loop. In fact, Cython is able to do this.
but special cases aren't special enough to break the rules
On 02:12 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Aug 16, 3:35�pm, sturlamolden wrote:
On 16 Aug, 14:57, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> Well, the alternative would be to have two keywords for
looping: one
> for your "simple" incrementing integer loop, and another for a loop
that
> oper
On 01:53 am, [email protected] wrote:
On Aug 16, 6:28�pm, [email protected] wrote:
On 01:23 am, [email protected] wrote:
>On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:35 PM, sturlamolden
>wrote:
>>A compiler could easily recognise a statement like
>>� for i in range(n):
>>as a simple int
On 01:44 am, http wrote:
[email protected] writes:
Although I think PyPy also recognizes this case and makes it as
efficient as using xrange, and does so without breaking any rules.
How can pypy possibly know that the user hasn't assigned some other
value to "range"?
It doesn't reall
On 06:32 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Aug 17, 4:40�am, [email protected] wrote:
On 02:12 am, [email protected] wrote:
>On Aug 16, 3:35�pm, sturlamolden wrote:
>>On 16 Aug, 14:57, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
>> > � � � � Well, the alternative would be to ha
On 03:56 am, [email protected] wrote:
[email protected] wrote:
There's a lot of things in Python that I don't strictly *need*. That
doesn't mean that they wouldn't be welcome if I could have them.
Getting rid of the range/xrange dichotomy would improve things.
The developers agreed a
On 01:41 am, [email protected] wrote:
In article
,
Graham Dumpleton wrote:
On Aug 24, 6:34=A0am, Sebastian Wiesner wrote:
In any case, there is bottle [1], which provides a *very minimal*
framewo=
rk
for WSGI web development. =A0Don't expect too much, it is really
small, a=
nd
does
On 09:06 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Is there telnet client in python?
i want to write NetHack telnet GUI app)
The Python stdlib has a module named telnetlib which offers rudamentary
telnet support. Twisted includes twisted.conch.telnet which implements
a much more complete telnet library.
On 02:51 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I would like to tell the system that it's OK to write Unicode to
sys.out
and sys.err. However, I'm doing this in a CGI script where I don't
have
access to the system directories, and as such can't use
sys.setdefaultencoding in sitecustomize.py.
Is there a
On 10:23 pm, [email protected] wrote:
In article <[email protected]>,
John Nagle wrote:
Personally, I consider Python to be a good language held back by
too-close ties to a naive interpreter implementation and the lack
of a formal standard for the language.
Name
On 07:51 am, [email protected] wrote:
Hi
I am trying to use kqueue. Since, I am on v2.5, I use the baclport:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/select26/0.1a3.
Following the example at:
http://julipedia.blogspot.com/2004/10/example-of-kqueue.html (which
works perfectly as it tells all events), I tried
On 07:27 pm, [email protected] wrote:
If I am not mistaken http://python.org/dev/buildbot/community/all/
has
been down since python.org had its harddrive issues.
Anyone know a time line on getting it back up and running.
This service is, unfortunately, unmaintained. It broke when I
upgraded
On 02:06 pm, [email protected] wrote:
When you define a class in a script, and then pickle instances of that
class in the same script and store them to disk, you can't load that
pickle in another script. At least not the straightforward way
[pickle.load(file('somefile.pickle'))]. If you try it, yo
On 06:23 pm, [email protected] wrote:
If I am not mistaken http://python.org/dev/buildbot/community/all/ has
been down since python.org had its harddrive issues.
Anyone know a time line on getting it back up and running.
This service is, unfortunately, unmaintained. It broke when I upgraded
t
On 12:20 pm, [email protected] wrote:
Alan G Isaac wrote:
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71605, Apr 14 2009, 22:40:02) [MSC v.1500 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more
information.
class MyError(Exception):
... def __init__(self, message):
... Exception.__
On 02:28 pm, [email protected] wrote:
I am not sure how best to deprecate dependence on the
Python 2.5 mistake, but this is not it. And I know at
least one important library that is affected.
I'll agree that it's not great. I certainly would have preferred it not
to have been done. It i
On 07:20 pm, [email protected] wrote:
On Sep 6, 7:53�pm, koranthala wrote:
Hi,
� �For a financial application, �I am creating a python tool which
uses HTTPS to transfer the data from client to server. Now, everything
works perfectly, since the SSL support comes free with Twisted.
� �I have o
1 - 100 of 119 matches
Mail list logo