Greg Ewing wrote:
Steven Bethard wrote:
Gigi wrote:
I need access to a function object that corresponds to a frame object
in a certain case from inside the function.
Can you look up the code's co_name in the previous frame's locals?
You probably also need to check the previous frame's globals...
Hello!
I can't seem to get paths and variables working together:
import os
a = 'books'
os.chdir( '/test')
os.mkdir("/test/"a)
the last line does not seem to work. os.mkdir(a) makes the directory
books, but i want this directory as a subdirectory of test.
I also tried: os.mkdir("/test/",a), and
Sheila King said unto the world upon 2005-04-22 02:45:
I have a web app that has been running just fine for several months under
Python 2.2.2.
We are preparing to upgrade the server to run Python 2.4.1.
However, part of my web app is throwing an error on this code (that has
previously worked wit
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2005-04-22 00:13:05 -0700:
> Hello!
>
> I can't seem to get paths and variables working together:
>
> import os
> a = 'books'
> os.chdir( '/test')
> os.mkdir("/test/"a)
>
> the last line does not seem to work. os.mkdir(a) makes the directory
> books, but i want this direct
--- Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> praba kar wrote:
> > Dear All,
> >
> > In Php If I send a command to system function
> > then It will return 1 on success and 0 on failure.
> So
> > based upon that value I can to further work.
> >
> > But In Python If I send a command to s
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2005-04-22 08:35:33 +0100:
>
> --- Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > praba kar wrote:
> > > In Php If I send a command to system function
> > > then It will return 1 on success and 0 on failure.
> > > So based upon that value I can to further work.
> > >
> > >
praba kar wrote:
I agree above statement but When I delete a directory
os.system('rm -rf test')
0
if directory is not present then I again try to
delete
os.system('rm -rf test')
now this time also It will print
0
As Roman Neuhauser says, this is the correct behavior of the -f switch
for rm.
In [
"praba kar" wrote:
> I agree above statement but When I delete a directory
> os.system('rm -rf test')
> 0
> if directory is not present then I again try to
> delete
> os.system('rm -rf test')
> now this time also It will print
> 0
so? if you read the "rm" man page, you'll find this little paragr
Max, thanks; that was helpful. Roman, your explanation was helpful as
well. Dan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello!
I was trying to create a program to search for the largest common
subsetstring among filenames in a directory, them move the filenames
to the substring's name. I have succeeded, with help, in doing so and
here is the code.
Thanks for your help!
--- Code ---
#This program was created wit
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Steven Bethard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Ahh, ok. Now I understand. I think you could probably search the
> > python-dev archives and see why the decision was made as it was.
On 21 Apr 2005 23:39:03 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Kindly suggest me some ideas/comments.
Why don't you make a start, and come back to us with whatever problems
you encounter? We're happy to help, but we aren't going to do it for
you.
Andrew Dalke's "Wrapping command-li
On 4/22/05, Roman Neuhauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > import os
> > a = 'books'
> > os.chdir( '/test')
> > os.mkdir("/test/"a)
> >
> > the last line does not seem to work. os.mkdir(a) makes the directory
> > books, but i want this directory as a subdirectory of test.
> http://docs.python.
> "Ilpo" == Ilpo NyyssÃnen writes:
Ilpo> James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Is it relevant that Python can produce compiled expressions? I
>> don't think that there is such a thing with Perl.
Ilpo> The problem in python here is that it needs to always
Ilpo> reco
I found this error message when I import pylab.
from pylab import *
Error message:
Microsoft Visual C++ Runtime Library
Assertion failed!
Program:c\python24\python.exe
File:CXX/cxx_extentions.cxx
Line:1031
Expression: ob_refcnt == 0
For information on how your program can cause an assertion
fail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am trying to prevent a user from resizing a frame beyond its
"natural" size as given by winfo_reqwidth and winfo_reqheight, without
any success. Can anyone make any suggestions, based on my code below?
Thanks!
from Tkinter import *
class Table(Frame):
def __init__(sel
Thanks for your reply
I started writing the script.. I have gone through documentation for
getopt
import string, getopt, sys
def usage():
print '''myscript.py -- uses getopt to recognize options
Options: -n -- No
-t -- T
-h -- help
-i -- i
-o -- Outp
[Sheila King]
> I have a web app that has been running just fine for several months under
> Python 2.2.2.
>
> We are preparing to upgrade the server to run Python 2.4.1.
>
> However, part of my web app is throwing an error on this code (that has
> previously worked without exception):
>
> >>> time.
On 22 Apr 2005 03:16:02 -0700, hue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for your reply
>
> I started writing the script.. I have gone through documentation for
> getopt
(snip)
Good start. I tend to prefer optparse over getopt these days, but if
you've got it working the way you want it, you shoul
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'd like to know if I am trying to do something impossible or I am just
being unable to find how to do it. In the latter case, please... help
me...
(snip)
>
My problem is that I don't know how to create a graph_object that
remains persistent through time (it has to be t
Ville Vainio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> "Ilpo" == Ilpo Nyyssönen writes:
>
> Ilpo> The problem in python here is that it needs to always
> Ilpo> recompile the regexp. I would like to have a way to write a
> Ilpo> regexp as a constant and then python should compile that
> I
This is all the info I need from the xml file:
ID --> 320632
Name -->
Pzp
Startbase -->
126957426
126989473
51860
Hello Jean,
Glad to see your still playing along.
I have tested your script and it is broken too :(
Good idea about checking for the ':' , it just doesn't cover every
case.
This is the very reason I had not included docstring support before!
The problem is more diffcult than it first appears,
I am
Ok, I have the following directory structure
C:\pycode
--> blah.py
--> mynewdir
--> __init__.py
--> abc.py
[[ C:\pycode\mynewdir\abc.py ]]
def doFoo():
print "hi"
def doBar():
print "bye"
[[ C:\pycode\mynewdir\__init__.py ]]
from mynewdir import *
[[ C:\pycode\blah
> Traceback (most recent call last):
>> File "", line 1, in ?
>> ImportError: No module named SHIP
>>
> Two common problems here:
> 1) There is no file *\SHIP.pyd where * is one entry of sys.path
> 2) The capitalization is not correct. The file lookup will succeed,
>but then, when "initSHIP(
Raymond Hettinger wrote:
Since the rules for handling missing, inconsistent, or out-of-range tuple fields
are not defined, even that revision has some risk. To future-proof the code,
use strptime() to generate a well-formed time tuple:
strptime('%d-%d-%d' % (y,m,d), '%Y-%m-%d')
(2005, 5, 15, 0, 0,
click on my computer
Then select tools->folder options->File Types
scroll down the where the py extension is defined, highlight it, click
on advanced
then highlight open and hit the edit button.
There you should see python.exe with some other stuff, change it to
pythonw.exe
Then, in the future,
Assuming they run as a separate thread, I want to point IDLE to
.../Debug/Python_d.exe one day and .../Release/Python.exe for the next.
Also, is there any easy way to run the .../Debug/Python_d.exe so started
under the MSVC debugger?
tia,
Bill
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/py
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ilpo Nyyssönen) wrote:
> Of course it caches those when running. The point is that it needs to
> recompile every time you have restarted the program. With short lived
> command line programs this really can be a problem.
Are you speculating that it might be a problem, or saying
I'm trying to create a SSL-enabled server in Python, and in the doc for
the socket module:
ssl(sock[, keyfile, certfile])
Initiate a SSL connection over the socket sock. keyfile is the
name of a PEM formatted
file that contains your private key. certfile is a PEM formatted
certificate c
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 14:59:59 +0200, André Søreng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm trying to create a SSL-enabled server in Python, and in the doc for
the socket module:
ssl(sock[, keyfile, certfile])
Initiate a SSL connection over the socket sock. keyfile is the name of
a PEM formatted
f
As I'm trying to write the code using cElementTree.
I stumble across one problem. Sometimes there are multiple values to
retrieve from one record for the same element. Like this:
ATP-binding cassette, subfamily G, member 1
ATP-binding cassette 8
How do you get not only the first, but the rest as w
By the way, I know about findall, but when I iterate thruogh it like:
for x in function:
print 'function', x
I get:
function
function
But ofcourse I want the information in there...
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 15:22:17 +0200, Willem Ligtenberg wrote:
> As I'm trying to write the code using cE
Roy Smith wrote:
> import types
>
> class slicableDict (dict):
> def __getitem__ (self, index):
> if type (index) == types.SliceType:
> d2 = slicableDict()
> for key in self.keys():
> if key >= index.start and key < index.stop:
>
Reinhold Birkenfeld wrote:
> Other possibility, probably faster when almost all keys in the range are in
> the dictionary:
>
> class sdict(dict):
> def __getitem__(self, index):
> if isinstance(index, slice):
> d = {}
> for key in xrange(slice.start, slice.stop
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2005-04-21, Sergei Organov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Well, I'm writing for embedded realtime systems in C/C++ and
>> have never encountered a single need to use goto.
>
> I have encountered situations in C programs where the best
> thing to use
Willem Ligtenberg wrote:
As I'm trying to write the code using cElementTree.
I stumble across one problem. Sometimes there are multiple values to
retrieve from one record for the same element. Like this:
ATP-binding cassette, subfamily G, member 1
ATP-binding cassette 8
How do you get not only the
[Sheila King]
> I have a web app that has been running just fine for several months under
> Python 2.2.2.
>
> We are preparing to upgrade the server to run Python 2.4.1.
>
> However, part of my web app is throwing an error on this code (that has
> previously worked without exception):
>
> >>> time.
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2005-04-21, Sergei Organov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Grant Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> On 2005-04-21, Peter Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> > Maxim Kasimov schrieb:
>>> >> but what if i just can't to do this becouse i'm working thrue ssh, and
>>> >>
As you can read in the other post of mine, my problem was with the
iterating through the list. didn't know that you should do. e.text. I did
only print e, not print e.text
Did read documentation, but must admit not everything.
Anyway, thank you very much!
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 15:47:08 +0200, Fredr
Willem Ligtenberg wrote:
By the way, I know about findall, but when I iterate thruogh it like:
for x in function:
print 'function', x
I get:
function
function
But ofcourse I want the information in there...
for x in function:
print 'function', x.text
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/l
On 2005-04-22, Reinhold Birkenfeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sure, but what about the case where his program is on paper
tape and all he has for an editor is an ice pick?
>>>
>>> Then inserting goto doesn't seem to be an acceptable option
>>> either ;)
>>
>> Scissors, tape, and a box f
Grant Edwards wrote:
Sure, but what about the case where his program is on paper
tape and all he has for an editor is an ice pick?
Paper tape? Luxury
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi all!
I'm trying to extend the functionality of the file object by creating a
class that derives from file. MyFile class re-implements __init__(),
write(), writelines() and close() to augment the capabilities of file.
All works fine, except for one thing: 'print >> myfile' does not
execute
> "Ilpo" == Ilpo NyyssÃnen writes:
Ilpo> Of course it caches those when running. The point is that it
Ilpo> needs to recompile every time you have restarted the
Ilpo> program. With short lived command line programs this really
Ilpo> can be a problem.
I didn't imagine it could
On Thursday 21 April 2005 09:01 am, codecraig wrote:
> I am interested in regular expressions and how Perl and Python
> compare. Particulary, I am interested in performance (i.e. speed),
> memory usage, flexibility, completeness (i.e. supports simple and
> complex regex operations...basically is
Rocco Moretti wrote:
Steve Holden wrote:
The principle of least surprise is all very well, but "needless
surprise of newbies" is a dangerous criterion to adopt for programming
language design and following it consistently would lead to a mess
like Visual Basic, which grew by accretion until Micr
willitfw wrote:
I'm including the code that I've been using. I am relatively new to
python, and not sure if a socket was created:
*
import socket
socket.setdefaulttimeout(None)
sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
The last line above creates a socket... and I su
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> I have a python file that is trying to read raw data from a raw
> partition on a dying dist, eg
>
> f = file('/dev/sda')
> f.seek(SOMEWHERE)
> s = f.read(SOMEBYTES)
>
> On some blocks, the read succeeds, on others it fails and an IOError is
> thrown, and on others
Sion Arrowsmith said unto the world upon 2005-04-22 13:00:
Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
you've not included the part of your code which acts on the
user's input.
I think you'll find the answer to the question of where the code
that acts on the user's input lies here:
(And your
There is no God. OK, Ron, discuss.
Ron wrote:
> Reports to [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
> [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> And do not feed the troll!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I will answer my own question in case anyone else ever has this
problem.
I knew the problem (although some say it's not) existed with the
namespace of pictures, that if you didn't save the pictures in
persistent memory they would disappear as soon as the function that
called them was exited. So a
John Machin wrote:
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 17:26:19 -0700, Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
While you can, sort of, and people have already pointed out the
appropriate web page to you, I ask that you *don't* use the PSF License.
The PSF License uses proper nouns that you will have to change[1]
I have an image in the Python Image Library. I'm trying to get it into
PyGTK in color. Is there any way to do this cross-platform, preferably
without writing to anything to the disk?
PIL apparently can't write XPMs. GTK will only take XPMs, that I can see.
Therein lies the rub. I can ship over mon
On Thursday 21 April 2005 08:48 am, codecraig wrote:
> widget = gui.MyCustomWidget.MyCustomWidge()
>
> ...seems weird, how should I structure this? Is it not common to have
> one class in a .py?
No, it isn't really. Usually, there will be several related classes in a single
module. Only if the
Michael Spencer wrote:
Steven Bethard wrote:
Bengt Richter wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2005 15:37:03 -0600, Steven Bethard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a list of strings that looks something like:
['O', 'B_X', 'B_Y', 'I_Y', 'O', 'B_X', 'I_X', 'B_X']
[snip]
With error checks on predecessor relat
On Friday 22 April 2005 06:44 pm, Scott David Daniels wrote:
> Terry Hancock wrote:
> > On Friday 22 April 2005 05:18 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> > Perhaps you don't know how to call such functions? E.g.:
> > a=[ lambda t: t**n for n in range(4) ]
> a[2](3)
> > 27
>
> Didn't you notic
Laszlo,
>>> Is it something like 'center' or 'color' for Americans and 'centre' or
'colour' for British people?
Yes, exactly.
>>> (Sorry to be offtopic)
No need to apologize. I started to read the postings on this list and was
dismayed at the depth of rudeness on here. I thought that python
On Friday 22 April 2005 05:18 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Thanx for your replies.
>
> I'm looking for array of functions.
> Something like a=[ sin(x) , cos(x) ]
You had a list of lambda functions in your first post and in the
subject line still. How is that not what you wanted?
If you want an
What is the correct way to propagate exceptions from Python callbacks?
When I do this:
Python -> C++ -> Python Callback
(example attached) an exception raised in the callback doesn't make it back
across C++ to Python.
It appears that PyGILState_Release() at the bottom of the
Steven Bethard wrote:
Bengt Richter wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2005 15:37:03 -0600, Steven Bethard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a list of strings that looks something like:
['O', 'B_X', 'B_Y', 'I_Y', 'O', 'B_X', 'I_X', 'B_X']
[snip]
With error checks on predecessor relationship,
I think I'd do
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 22:43:13 -0400, Jeremy Bowers wrote:
> (Use case, in case it matters: I am trying to embed a graphic into a text
> widget. This is going fine. Because I want the text widget to be able use
> different size text, and no one image can look right with everything from
> 8pt to 40pt
"Fredrik Lundh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> so you picked the wrong file format for the task, and the slowest
> tool you could find for that file format, and instead of fixing
> that, you decided that the regular expression engine was to blame
> for the bad performance. hmm.
What would you reco
> does anyone have any ideas as to how to go about creating a plugin/toolbar
> for both/either the IE/Firefox browsers?
For IE, checkout Browser Helper Objects (BHOs). Sample python code
can be found at:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Mail/Message/ctypes-users/2263094
Marcus
--
http://mail.pyt
I'm having difficulty sending out correctly named method parameters to
a php soap server that I am running using SOAPpy. Idealy I would like
to send XML that looks like this (which I cribbed from another client
that works just fine)
http://testuri.org";>
I'm trying to learn pylibpcap and would //really// love to see a
**simple**
example that just works.
Can someone *please* send me any little app that just
captures packets with next() command and prints bytes received??
If it only works on loopback interface that is fine.
Thanks in advance.
On 22 Apr 2005 13:28:57 -0700, codecraig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i want to the number of bytes in a string...
>
> is, len(x) accurate?
>
> so, x = "hi"
> len(x) == 2 so that means two bytes?
>
> thanks
No, that means that the string is two bytes in length. The number of
bytes is depen
On 2005-04-22, Will McGugan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> How *do* you pronounce it? "Thurrow" seems to match
>> how I say the word, along with everyone else I've
>> ever met (until now?).
>
> I would pronounce it like 'thurra', since I'm Scottish. It always makes
> me cringe when Americans pron
Bengt Richter wrote:
> I still don't know what you are asking for, but here is a toy,
> ...
> But why not spend some time with the tutorials, so have a few more
cards in your deck
> before you try to play for real? ;-)
Communication problem.
All he wanted is automatic evaluation a la spreadsheet
great!
How about change the bbcode like editor to FCKeditor? I think
FCKeditor is much better, or make it as an optional editor which the
user could select it himself.
2005/4/23, Irmen de Jong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I've released a new version of Frog, a web log
> aka blogging server written in 1
On Friday 22 April 2005 01:12 pm, Adomas wrote:
> this question has nothing to do with Python syntax,
> or libraries, however...
>
> I'm looking for the so well-known python logo -- not
> the boring "Python Powered", but the image of small
> snake. However, the only such I could found was 32x32
>
Laszlo Zsolt Nagy wrote:
Hi All!
I know there has been a post about Python licencing but I have different
questions. I tried to Google for "Python Licence" and "Python Licencing"
but I could not find the answer.
Is there a place where I can ready about Python licencing? (A FAQ
maybe?) I really
Pre-announcement:
Our May meeting will be the *THIRD* Thursday, May 19. We will *NOT* be
meeting the *SECOND* Thursday. This will be our first meeting at Google,
with Alex Martelli's presention on design patterns. More details later!
--
Aahz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <*> http://www
hi...
this probably isn't the correct mailing list, but we're giving it a shot!!
does anyone have any ideas as to how to go about creating a plugin/toolbar
for both/either the IE/Firefox browsers?
We're curious as to how to do this, and what languages/technologies you'd
use to do this.. could it
On 22 Apr 2005 14:41:45 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was thinking about something like the following;
>
> >>> a=[ t**n for n in range(4) ]
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "", line 1, in ?
> NameError: name 't' is not defined
> >>>
>
> or
>
> >>> a=[ lambda
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 17:26:19 -0700, Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>While you can, sort of, and people have already pointed out the
>appropriate web page to you, I ask that you *don't* use the PSF License.
>The PSF License uses proper nouns that you will have to change[1].
and don't fo
-- *~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*~:~*Vedanta BarooahYM! - vedanta2006Skype - vedanta2006--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 16:01:42 -0700, Michael Spencer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Steven Bethard wrote:
>> Bengt Richter wrote:
>>
>>> On Thu, 21 Apr 2005 15:37:03 -0600, Steven Bethard
>>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
I have a list of strings that looks something like:
['O', 'B_X',
On Friday 22 April 2005 9:26 pm, John J. Lee wrote:
> "R. C. James Harlow" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > On Friday 22 April 2005 20:07, Grant Edwards wrote:
> > > I've never tried Qt.
> >
> > Qt, in my opinion, is as excellent as python in the consistency stakes,
> > has the best documentation ba
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