On Friday 07 December 2001 16:58, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> > The '''-quoted doc strings are still also a problem for Emacs.
> - Since emacs already handles multi-line strings with double
> quotes, would it be possible to fix it to handle multi-line strings
> with single quotes?
As far as I know
On Friday 07 December 2001 04:08 pm, Darryl VanDorp wrote:
> -Original Message-
> what editor do you guys use when programming python?
> Linux preferred...
http://webware.colorstudy.net/twiki/bin/view/Webware/TextEditors
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On Friday 07 December 2001 02:30 pm, Ian Bicking wrote:
> I've also found that as long as I leave the tabwidth at 8, the
> auto-tab-detection works correctly -- i.e., Emacs inserts tabs in
> files that use tabs, and spaces in files that use spaces. I don't
> know why it doesn't work with a tabwid
-Original Message-
what editor do you guys use when programming python?
Linux preferred...
Thanks
-darryl
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Chuck,
like Ian said it works fine if you set the tab width to 8 instead of
4. This is the default, in fact. The problem then, however, is that
the line wrapping is totally screwed up.
This wouldn't be such a problem (and we wouldn't complain so much) if
several other conventions were foll
On Friday 07 December 2001 13:12, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 11:08 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > I'm taking a closer look at the implementation of
> > SessionDynamicStore. It looks like it actually checks the
> > filesystem on _every_ request, even if the session is in
On Friday 07 December 2001 14:30, Ian Bicking wrote:
> The '''-quoted doc strings are still also a problem for Emacs.
Those and the unwrapped lines (usually docstrings) actually bother me
much more than the tabs.
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On Fri, Dec 07, 2001 at 01:38:52PM -0800, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> Okay, on more positive note without getting into flamewars again, I
> have been thinking the following, but need help from emacs users in the
> answers:
>
> - Recently, I saw a text file where someone included special comments
On Friday 07 December 2001 11:08 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> I'm taking a closer look at the implementation of
> SessionDynamicStore. It looks like it actually checks the filesystem
> on _every_ request, even if the session is in memory. This would
> seem to slow it down considerably.
>
> That
On Friday 07 December 2001 02:45 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> But Geoff suggested that it might be better to require an explicit
> arg to the start script to make damn sure it doesn't get them from
> the wrong place. I don't think it's that likely. Nonetheless the
> launcher script should loudly decla
On Friday 07 December 2001 13:55, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Tuesday 04 December 2001 06:01 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> > * It requires Python 2.0 and up. I don't see any compelling
> > reason to continue support for 1.5.2. If people can install
> > Webware they can also install 2.0! If they're c
On Friday 07 December 2001 13:34, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 12:43 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> > The scheme we were talking about yesterday would allow the end
> > user to make the choice of whether to go for a single file or
> > split it up. To Webware and its components it
On Tuesday 04 December 2001 06:01 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> * It requires Python 2.0 and up. I don't see any compelling reason
> to continue support for 1.5.2. If people can install Webware they
> can also install 2.0! If they're concerned about breaking existing
> Apps by making that change, why
On Thursday 06 December 2001 03:49 pm, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> At 06:43 PM 12/6/01 -0500, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> >At 12:32 PM 12/6/01 -0800, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> >>Why are method names different between ServletFactory and
> >>PythonServletFactory?
> >>
> >>ServletFactory.createServletForTransa
On Thursday 06 December 2001 12:04 pm, Love, Jay wrote:
> From memory, with cgi, if there is a location header, a redirect is
> assumed. With mod_webkit, you need to set the response code, I think.
Yipee! That was it. Thanks, Jay.
def _respond(self, trans):
trans.response
On Thursday 06 December 2001 08:16 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> It seems we're not the only ones having this debate:
>
> http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&threadm=pan.2001.12.06.13.23.30
>.752127.1733%40uchicago.edu&prev=/groups%3Fhl%3Den%26group%3Dcomp.lang
>.python
>
> ;)
Okay, on more positive
On Friday 07 December 2001 12:43 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> The scheme we were talking about yesterday would allow the end user
> to make the choice of whether to go for a single file or split it up.
> To Webware and its components it would be transparent. I think
> option 2 or 3 should be the defau
At 01:22 PM 12/7/01 -0800, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
>On Thursday 06 December 2001 03:49 pm, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > At 06:43 PM 12/6/01 -0500, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > >At 12:32 PM 12/6/01 -0800, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> > >>Why are method names different between ServletFactory and
> > >>PythonSe
On Friday 07 December 2001 13:15, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > The WebKit launcher would accept either a "Configs" directory, or
> > a
>
> We could also take the same route that Python and other apps follow
> when searching for files:
>
On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> The WebKit launcher would accept either a "Configs" directory, or a
We could also take the same route that Python and other apps follow
when searching for files:
- look in standard places
- WebKit/Configs
On Friday 07 December 2001 12:49 pm, Tavis Rudd wrote:
> Why not just go for only the assignment style and get rid of the old
> dictionary parsing method completely? Transitioning an app from one
> to the other is a matter of a few minutes. Keeping both around just
> makes the code more complex
On Friday 07 December 2001 11:04 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> The __init__.py was just so that the config files could be imported
> as a package. But if there are good reasons to stick with *.config,
> then obviously you can't just import the files as a package, so the
> reason for __init__.py g
On Friday 07 December 2001 11:26, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 11:04 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > >The plan I was changing for Configurable was simply to do an
> > > exec, unless the first char was a {, in which case I would do
> > > an eval.
> >
> > Just make sure to ch
On Friday 07 December 2001 10:55, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > As far as naming conventions, these are valid Python
> > modules/packages, so .py would probably be best. But it would be
> > nice to be able to identify config files from
On Fri, Dec 07, 2001 at 10:55:20AM -0800, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > As far as naming conventions, these are valid Python
> > modules/packages, so .py would probably be best. ?But it would be
> > nice to be able to identify config fil
I'm taking a closer look at the implementation of SessionDynamicStore. It
looks like it actually checks the filesystem on _every_ request, even if
the session is in memory. This would seem to slow it down considerably.
That plus the concurrency issue and it looks like SessionDynamicStore coul
At 10:55 AM 12/7/01 -0800, Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
>On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> > As far as naming conventions, these are valid Python
> > modules/packages, so .py would probably be best. But it would be
> > nice to be able to identify config files from their fi
On Friday 07 December 2001 06:05 am, Geoffrey Talvola wrote:
> As far as naming conventions, these are valid Python
> modules/packages, so .py would probably be best. But it would be
> nice to be able to identify config files from their filename, so it
> could look like this for a multiple-file c
At 05:30 PM 12/6/01 -0800, Tavis Rudd wrote:
>I've attached a copy of the old .webkit_config_annotated file
>translated to the proposed format. It seems to work with all
>versions of Python, not just 2.1 and up. This file contains all the
>settings and is more complicated than the average user w
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