Jojo Mwebaze jojo.mweb...@gmail.com wrote
How is possible to trace the all method calls, object instantiations,
variables used in running an experiment dynamically, without putting
print
- or log statements in my code? - some sort of provenance!
There are several debuggers for Python
Researchers at our university are allowed to checkout code from CVS, make
modifications, change variables/parameters and run experiments.. After
experiments are run, results are published. (However we don't allow them to
commit the changes, till changes are approved)
take an example, two
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 10:01:11 pm Jojo Mwebaze wrote:
Researchers at our university are allowed to checkout code from CVS,
make modifications, change variables/parameters and run experiments..
After experiments are run, results are published. (However we don't
allow them to commit the changes,
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 12:16:03 pm Jojo Mwebaze wrote:
Hello Tutor
I have two problems, any help will be highly appreciated.
How is possible to trace the all method calls, object instantiations,
variables used in running an experiment dynamically, without putting
print - or log statements in
Hi .
If you want to see what is in a pyc file,just type
od pycfile at bash command prompt.
You can see only rows of numbers.
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On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 22:31:58 +
laura castañeda laura_cast...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi my name is Laura and im currently trying to solve one of the
challenges in the book: Python Programming, second edition by Michael
Dawson... I'm stuck in the 5 chapter because of this challenge, im the
Hello,
I was looking for a way to get info about func definition, esp. its param list.
The aim beeing to reproduce more or less its header line.
Found useful hints at
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/582056/getting-list-of-parameters-inside-python-function.
Example:
Hello,
I have a simple question. I have created a module call Newmark.py and it
runs fine, however, I want to add some documentation so that when I type
in the console help(Newmark) it will give a description of the module.
Any ideas?
Thanks,
Richie
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 8:16 PM, Armstrong, Richard J.
rarms...@water.ca.gov wrote:
Hello,
I have a simple question. I have created a module call Newmark.py and it
runs fine, however, I want to add some documentation so that when I type in
the console help(Newmark) it will give a
I use this code to quit a completed program. If no is selected for the
yes/no prompt, warning messages appear in the shell window. I'm
executing from IDLE. Is there a way to just return to the prompt there?
def finish():
print; print Bye
print
raw_input('Press Enter to quit')
On 3/23/2010 4:47 PM, Wayne Watson wrote:
I use this code to quit a completed program. If no is selected for the
yes/no prompt, warning messages appear in the shell window.
What is the yes/no prompt? Is it in your program or is it a feature of IDLE?
What are the warning messages?
I'm
run this file (test.py) as:
def finish():
print '\n', bye, '\n'
raw_input('Press Enter to quit: ')
finish()
$python -i test.py
A second approach could be:
def finish():
import os, subprocess
print '\n', bye, '\n'
raw_input('Press Enter to quit: ')
On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 07:47:40 am Wayne Watson wrote:
I use this code to quit a completed program.
What on earth for? If the program is complete, just quit.
In my opinion, there is very little worse than setting up a chain of
long-running programs to run overnight, then coming back in the
Win 7.
Some time ago, I believe under Tutor, it was suggested when quitting to
move the method I described.
Ah, I see what happened!
I had used this in something of an earlier incarnation of the program
when some tkinter code was in use. There was a loop in the code, and the
quit code used
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