Thank you, always useful to study other people's code. I wasn't planning to
create a Gui for my app. It struck me that the Gui class also contains all the
methods that deal with the html parsing. But maybe that's what your warnings
were about. ;-)
Cheers!!
Albert-Jan
On 19/05/11 14:15, Joe Aquilina wrote:
On 19/05/11 13:53, Andre Engels wrote:
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 6:36 AM, Joe Aquilina wrote:
I am new to this list and very much a beginner to Python. Please
excuse me
if this is a silly question, but in all my searches this morning I
have not
been able
Hello Lina!
On Wednesday 18.05.2011 05:22:50 lina wrote:
> May I ask another question:
>
> where I can get some advanced, terse and powerful python tutorials.
> short but powerful and a bit hard to understand at first.
The tutorial on Python's website is relatively terse, but it uses a simple
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 12:25 AM, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
> Thank you, always useful to study other people's code. I wasn't planning to
> create a Gui for my app.
>
It was necessary for the purpose - I didn't want all, or even most, of the
mp3s on the site, but certainly enough of them that aut
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 8:15 AM, Joe Aquilina wrote:
> I realised after I read your response that I probably hadn't included enough
> information, partly due to my inexperience in Python and partly due to
> haste on my part.
>
> AFter my original post, I had a little play in Python and was able
Sorry I am still lost. So I am suppose to use a string? Something like: (just
not sure is the right string...)
def ReceiveAndReturn():
str="I have 5 Apples and 6 oranges";
print "str._add1"
ReceiveAndReturn()
Want output to be:
I have 6 Apples and 7 oranges
__
Susana Iraiis Delgado Rodriguez wrote:
>
> Hello Alan!!
> Can you please tell me, how to rebuild my path? I've tried it, but I
> didn't
> succed =(
>
>
The doctest for the Shapefile function includes this line:
>>> shp = Shapefile(base='/home/mapnik/data',file='world_borders')
This tell
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 11:10 AM, Cindy Lee wrote:
> Sorry I am still lost. So I am suppose to use a string? Something like:
> (just not sure is the right string...)
Well, no. The assignment you've been given states the you need to
define a function that takes a string as an argument, for example
Hello everyone!
Well, I tried this code in other computer and it worked just fine. I changed
the line:
lyr.datasource = mapnik.Shapefile(base=filepath, file=filepath)
for lyr.datasource = mapnik.Shapefile(base=ruta,file=archivo[0])
I also did hard coding to test my script:
lyr.datasour
why there is two way to represent strings in python ? single-coated
( ' ' ) and double-coated ( " " ) strings both serve the purpose of string.
Then what is the difference?
___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription opti
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 10:45 AM, naheed arafat wrote:
> why there is two way to represent strings in python ? single-coated
> ( ' ' ) and double-coated ( " " ) strings both serve the purpose of string.
> Then what is the difference?
>
> ___
> Tutor mai
On 5/19/2011 7:45 AM naheed arafat said...
why there is two way to represent strings in python ? single-coated
( ' ' ) and double-coated ( " " ) strings both serve the purpose of
string. Then what is the difference?
Convenience. Particularly when the strings contain quote characters.
mystrin
"Cindy Lee" wrote
Sorry I am still lost.
Noah gave you a good breakdown to follow however...
So I am suppose to use a string?
You are supposed to use a string as a parameter
of your function and process it to generate a new
string which you return from the function.
Do you understand
"Terry Carroll" wrote
Is there any way to use xrange with a start or stop value that
exceeds sys.maxint?
Not in python v2(*), just use range().
In Python v3 xrange has been removed as has sys.maxint
(*)Or at least up to 2.5, I don;t have 2.6 or 2.7...
HTH,
--
Alan Gauld
Author of th
"Joe Aquilina" wrote
I have a (single table) database file (SQLite3). It has one table,
call it literature, with an integer, autoincrement primary key
field. I have created a data entry form in Python that I want to use
to enter new rows into this database file. On the data entry form I
wil
"Susana Iraiis Delgado Rodriguez"
wrote
Well, I tried this code in other computer and it worked just fine.
But when I run the module in my computer it throws many errors,
So what is different between the computers?
What are the respective OS versions and Python versions?
How exactly
So I figured out how to use the loop method, thanks. I still cannot seem to
figure out how to use Len() to show the output of my answers (from all my
googling Len() seems to be used to count characters?) Also, I am not really
sure I understand how to use the append method of the list.
Here's my
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 7:23 PM, Johnson Tran wrote:
> So I figured out how to use the loop method, thanks. I still cannot seem to
> figure out how to use Len() to show the output of my answers (from all my
> googling Len() seems to be used to count characters?) Also, I am not really
> sure I u
Hi Alan!!
After I read your e-mail, I remebered that I run the scripts in a different
way.
The script worked properly when I run it from Python IDLE, I don't have any
idea the reason why.
2011/5/19 Alan Gauld
>
> "Susana Iraiis Delgado Rodriguez" wrote
>
>
> Well, I tried this code in other
C:\>python hello.py
'python' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
C:\>cd python26
C:\Python26>python
Python 2.6.4 (r264:75708, Oct 26 2009, 08:23:19) [MSC v.1500 32 bit (Intel)] on
win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more in
You're in the python interpreter.
Hit control C to go back to cmd and then you can do "python hello.py"
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 4:14 PM, Neha P wrote:
> C:\>python hello.py
> 'python' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
> operable program or batch file.
>
> C:\>cd python26
>
>
Hey all,
I released my short URL engine last night and it works great. The only
problem I'm having now is that it's throwing LOTS of 'broken pipe'
errors, which as I understand from looking at raw socket docs in Python,
should throw a trappable exception.
This might be a little more 'advance
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Neha P wrote:
> C:\>python hello.py
> 'python' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
> operable program or batch file.
This happens because "python.exe" is not in the system path.
> C:\>cd python26
> C:\Python26>python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75708,
Hey all, got the solution...
Thanks for the help :) :)
Just needed to from
C:\Python26>Python hello.py
Its working fine...
From: Neha P
To: "tutor@python.org"
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 4:14 PM
Subject: [Tutor] Error in executing 'Python Filename.py'.
C:\>p
Hello All,
Is it possible to write document in ODP or DOC format with a python API?
Do you know an easy one and popular one which works with python 2.7.1?
Cheers
Karim
___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription opti
On 05/19/2011 10:57 PM, Karim wrote:
Hello All,
Is it possible to write document in ODP or DOC format with a python API?
Do you know an easy one and popular one which works with python 2.7.1?
Cheers
Karim
___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To u
On 19/05/11 17:26, Andre Engels wrote:
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 8:15 AM, Joe Aquilina wrote:
I realised after I read your response that I probably hadn't included enough
information, partly due to my inexperience in Python and partly due to
haste on my part.
AFter my original post, I had a li
27 matches
Mail list logo