On Mon, Apr 1, 2013 at 9:02 AM, Mark Lawrence <breamore...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote: > On 31/03/2013 22:21, Chris Angelico wrote: >>> >>> sue = time.mktime( >>> (int(m.group(7)), int(months[m.group(2)]), int(m.group(3)), >>> int(m.group(4)), int(m.group(5)), int(m.group(6)), >>> int(days[m.group(1)]), 0, 0) >>> ) >>> expire_time = (sue current_time)/60/60/24 >> >> >> Here's a likely problem. There's supposed to be an operator - probably >> a plus sign - between sue and current_time. >> > > There is actually a minus sign there which showed up when I pasted the code > into the Eclipse/Pydev editor. That sadly doesn't fix the problem with the > call to mktime, 12 open round brackets to 14 close if I've counted > correctly.
Oh, of course, since sue comes from mktime. But yeah, definitely needs an operator there. ChrisA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list