> "Brian" == Brian Lloyd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Brian> Note that imports are subtley different than getattr
Brian> behavior... does your main main 'pypackage' package
Brian> contain something like the following in its __init__?
Brian> from subpackage import *
It's reall
Hi all,
i'm in the process of embedding python in a C# application. After
initializing the engine, my application imports via (ImportModule) a
custom package which contains the python side of my code.
doing the following code raises an AttributeError Exception:
PyObject pypackage = PythonEngin
>>>>> "Alberto" == Alberto Berti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Alberto> i should better understand what generic types are
i answer by myself.. generic classes are much more "pythonic" :)
_
Pytho
> "Brian" == Brian Lloyd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Brian> Hi Aaron - PythonNet tip 'o the day: you can probably just
Brian> construct the array in Python as a normal list:
Brian> mylist = [[1, 2], [3, 4], ...]
Brian> If you pass that to a method with a signature that take
> "Aaron" == Aaron Rubin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Hi Aaron,
Aaron> from System import Array # works!
Aaron> myarray = Array[int](10) # fails! TypeError: Cannot
the correct semantic is myarray = Array[int]((0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9))
Aaron> I'm a little confused...obviously t
Hi Aaron,
the tarballs on pythondotnet's site are for .NET 1, if you want to use
it with .NET 2 you should checkout the last svn trunk and patch it
with the instruxtions described in this mail
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.python.dotnet/576 .In that message
there is also a link to binary pac