> So in a sorted list of files, some of the project 1.2 files will
> appear under 1-2 and others miles away under 1_2 ? And even if
> the submitter is not so dopey, the submittee has two different
> possibilities when looking for project 1.2's files? Brilliant! And
> this is an educational
On Mar 24, 9:12 am, simon.wo...@gmail.com wrote:
> Many thanks to all for explanations. I'm going to take everyone's
> advice and ignore the naming scheme (especially as, on rereading, the
> naming scheme is apparently only mandatory if you're using C or Maple,
> for some reason).
>
> Thanks again
Many thanks to all for explanations. I'm going to take everyone's
advice and ignore the naming scheme (especially as, on rereading, the
naming scheme is apparently only mandatory if you're using C or Maple,
for some reason).
Thanks again.
Simon
(For those interested:
> Do you mean that some au
On Mar 24, 4:56 am, simon.wo...@gmail.com wrote:
> It's a bit annoying, as I have an enforced naming scheme.
Do you mean that some authority other than yourself is seriously
insisting that the names of source files *must* start with one or more
digits? What is the rationale for such a scheme?
--
andrew cooke wrote:
ffs. feature, not bug. sorry.
> This is probably quite fundamental (I guess the lexer will implement it)
> so suspect it is impossible to change. That means it is a bug, not a
> feature (and it's quite a reasonable restriction, since it reduces
> ambiguity).
--
http://mai
simon.wo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello, all.
I don't suppose anyone has any idea why it seems to be impossible to
import any file which starts with a number? You get a syntax error,
whether the file exists or not.
Try it yourself:
import foo
ImportError: No module named foo
import 1foo
Fil
The grammar indicates that the module name is an identifier, and
identifiers can't start with digits (you can't have a variable name that
starts with a '1' either).
This is probably quite fundamental (I guess the lexer will implement it)
so suspect it is impossible to change. That means it is a
En Mon, 23 Mar 2009 14:56:21 -0300, escribió:
I don't suppose anyone has any idea why it seems to be impossible to
import any file which starts with a number? You get a syntax error,
whether the file exists or not.
You don't import a file, you import a module. And a module name is an
ident
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 1:56 PM, wrote:
> Hello, all.
>
> I don't suppose anyone has any idea why it seems to be impossible to
> import any file which starts with a number? You get a syntax error,
> whether the file exists or not.
Identifiers can't start with a number.
http://docs.python.org/r
Forgot to mention: I'm on Python 2.5.2, on Ubuntu 8.10.
Simon
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello, all.
I don't suppose anyone has any idea why it seems to be impossible to
import any file which starts with a number? You get a syntax error,
whether the file exists or not.
Try it yourself:
>>> import foo
ImportError: No module named foo
>>> import 1foo
File "", line 1
import 1fo
11 matches
Mail list logo