In comp.os.linux.misc David Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Peter T. Breuer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> There would be if an engine manufacturer refused to provide car
>> manufacturers with ANY engines for any model, unless all buyers were
>> charged for T
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> These objects (such as sqlstring.Select), represent
> complex SQL Statements, but as Python objects. The benefit is that you
> can, at run-time, "build" the statement pythonically, without
> getting bogged down in String Manipulation. The theory is that once in
> use, thi
Andreas Kostyrka wrote:
> > Do we have something like abstract methods & Abstract class.
> >
> > So that my class would just define the method. And the implementation
> > would be defined by somebody else.
>
> class AbstractBase:
> def method(self):
> raise TypeError("abstract method c
Jason Stitt wrote:
> On Oct 19, 2005, at 9:18 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>
>>My solution is sqlstring. A single-purpose library: to create SQL
>>statement objects. These objects (such as sqlstring.Select), represent
>>complex SQL Statements, but as Python objects.
>
>
>
>
> First of al
I was wondering how people would feel if the cmp function and
the __cmp__ method would be a bit more generalised.
The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
equal but neither is one less or greater than the other.
So I thought that e
"Tuvas" wrote:
> Well, the point of declaring it as a char was to have it as an 8 bit
> integer, as is requested later on in the program.
since ParseTuple writes an integer to the address you pass in,
that's likely to overwrite some random stuff on the stack. like-
wise, passing in a character b
Mike Meyer wrote:
> "David Veerasingam" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
> Of course, being the founder of SPARE, I have to point out that
> a.split(': ') will get you the same two strings as the re I used
> above.
>
Let me guess: the Society for the Prevention of Abuse of Regular
Expressions?
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
> indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
> equal but neither is one less or greater than the other.
If that is the case then you implement __eq__ and __ne__ to return
True/False and make cmp throw an excep
On 14 Oct 2005 19:01:42 -0700, "Xah Lee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Xah Lee, I went through some of your web site, because of time
couldn't examine (but a few) code guides. Read all you philosophy
pages though, even about languages I didn't know. I took a
course in my Mechanical Engineering study
Hello
python programmers! I would like to add myself to the ever increasing
number of python users. Here's my first question. I've written two SOAP
clients using PERL and a PHP. I tried to wirte a new SOAP client using
python but I'm having problems. First, I can't seem to find a good
documenta
Isn't
class AbstractBase:
def method(self):
raise NotImplementedError( "abstract method called" )
the right thing to do?
Gerald
- Original Message -
From: "Andreas Kostyrka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Iyer, Prasad C" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2005
Friend,
Check out http://ChezBrandon.com As are you, Brandon is highly
intelligent, knowledgeable, and good. May you have an awesome day.
A Succinct Warning: Elements of Mossad, sated with cash from the
murderous and destructive narcotics trade - for example, according to
Reader's Digest, cocaine a
Bryan wrote:
> Amol Vaidya wrote:
>
>> Hi. I am interested in learning a new programming language, and have
>> been debating whether to learn Ruby or Python.
(snip)
>
> why don't you do what i did? download ruby and spend a day or two
> reading "programming ruby" from www.ruby-lang.org/en. the
Doesn't work for classes because self has no global reference.
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Amol Vaidya wrote:
> Hi. I am interested in learning a new programming language, and have been
> debating whether to learn Ruby or Python. How do these compare and contrast
> with one another, and what advantages does one language provide over the
> other? I would like to consider as many opinio
Just use
os.system("export PYTHONPATH = %s" %("your_pythonpath"))
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If you use a newstyle class, e.g. class A(object), then you can get the
superclass with cls.__base__. You could also use super(cls,cls),
although note that it returns a object that isn't exactly the
same thing as a class -- but good enough for just accessing attributes.
Make sure to check that yo
Robin Becker wrote:
> I thought that methods were always overridable.
> In this case the lookup on the
> class changes the behaviour of the one and only property.
How can something be made overridable that is actually overridable? I
didn't know how to better express the broken polymorphism of Pyt
Op 2005-10-20, Duncan Booth schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>
>> The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
>> indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
>> equal but neither is one less or greater than the other.
>
> If that is the case then you implement _
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> Op 2005-10-20, Duncan Booth schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>>
>>> The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
>>> indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
>>> equal but neither is one less or greater than the other.
>>
>> If that i
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> Op 2005-10-20, Duncan Booth schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>>Antoon Pardon wrote:
>>
>>
>>>The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
>>>indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
>>>equal but neither is one less or greater than the other.
>>
>>If that i
Depends on your experience. If you know C,C++,Java and the whole
C-syntax-bunch. I'd recommend Python just to learn to adapt a different
syntax. If you want to learn for the learnings sake, i'd also recommend
Haskell to try functional programming, if you do not already know it.
Ruby has some inter
Hi everybody,
Thanks for the time taken to answer my question. Unfortunatly, it seems
that there's a little confusion about what I want to do.
In fact, I don't want to search for a particular path between
computers. What I really want is to detect sequences of connection that
are repeated along t
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thanks, it works. Though I don't quite understand what super(cls,cls)
returns, and it doesn't work if I do a super(cls,cls).foo(). But
cls.__base__.foo() do the trick.
thankfully, I don't have multiple inheritance.
Jason Lai wrote:
> If you use a newstyle class, e.g. class A(object), then you ca
On 14 Oct 2005 19:01:42 -0700, "Xah Lee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think this guy should run for President. Anybody says M$oft
is trying to screw the little guy is "alright" in my book.
>Microsoft Hatred, FAQ
>
>Xah Lee, 20020518
>
>Question: U.S. Judges are not morons, and quite a few othe
Op 2005-10-20, Mikael Olofsson schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>> Op 2005-10-20, Duncan Booth schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>
>>>Antoon Pardon wrote:
>>>
>>>
The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
e
"Peter T. Breuer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Not if they abuse a monopoly position in doing so, which is where we
> started.
In other words, what they did was wrong because it was them who did it.
It is fine if anyone else does, just not fine if Microsoft
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Occasionally (perhaps 5% of the time) the following exception gets
> raised:
>
> (10054, 'Connection reset by peer')
Generally this just means the connection has closed through some
unusual means, perhaps by being turned off, or a network cable being
unplugged, or a ti
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Jason Lai wrote:
>
>>If you use a newstyle class, e.g. class A(object), then you can get the
>>superclass with cls.__base__. You could also use super(cls,cls),
>>although note that it returns a object that isn't exactly the
>>same thing as a class -- but good enough fo
One-Liner Loop in Functional Style
Xah Lee, 200510
Today we show a example of a loop done as a one-liner of Functional
Programing style.
Suppose you have a list of file full paths of images:
/Users/t/t4/oh/DSCN2059m-s.jpg
/Users/t/t4/oh/DSCN2062m-s.jpg
/Users/t/t4/oh/DSCN2097m-s.jpg
/Users/t/t4
Ben Sizer wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>>Occasionally (perhaps 5% of the time) the following exception gets
>>raised:
>>
>>(10054, 'Connection reset by peer')
>
>
> Generally this just means the connection has closed through some
> unusual means, perhaps by being turned off, or a netwo
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> I was wondering how people would feel if the cmp function and
> the __cmp__ method would be a bit more generalised.
>
> The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
> indicate two objects are incomparable, they are not
> equal but neither is one less or greater tha
The message contains Unicode characters and has been sent as a binary
attachment.
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http://blog.ianbicking.org/ruby-python-power.html
http://www.ruby-doc.org/RubyEyeForThePythonGuy.html
http://onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Ruby/PythonAndRuby.rdoc
http://www.approximity.com/ruby/Comparison_rb_st_m_java.html
http://www.jvoegele.com/software/langcomp.html
http://reflectivesurface.co
Thanks for the explanation but some how my code fail and since I don't
need multiple inheritance for the moment, I would settle for the not so
clean version.
The documentation of super is not very clear to me too. As seen in my
code, I am using classmethod which may cause some problem.
Steve Hold
On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 03:15:03 -0700, "David Schwartz"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote or quoted :
>Did I say their obligation was to secure their shareholders as much
>profit as possible? I said their obligation was to their shareholders.
You are literally saying people work for a company have an o
Op 2005-10-20, Steve Holden schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>> I was wondering how people would feel if the cmp function and
>> the __cmp__ method would be a bit more generalised.
>>
>> The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
>> indicate two objects are incompara
On Thursday 20 October 2005 11:53, Steve Holden wrote:
> Personally I'm still not convinced that your requirement reflects a
> substantial use case (but then I'm getting used to that ;-). Just
> because an ordering is partial that doesn't mean that two instances of a
> class shouldn't be compar
Neal Norwitz wrote:
> I've never heard of this problem. The Makefile is generated by
> configure so this is possibly a configure issue. In my (generated)
> Makefile, signalmodule.o is listed in MODOBJS, but not in SIGNAL_OBJS.
> Maybe your signalmodule.o is listed in both?
>
> Search through t
In comp.os.linux.misc David Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Peter T. Breuer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Not if they abuse a monopoly position in doing so, which is where we
>> started.
> In other words, what they did was wrong because it was them
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> Op 2005-10-20, Steve Holden schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>>Antoon Pardon wrote:
>>
>>>I was wondering how people would feel if the cmp function and
>>>the __cmp__ method would be a bit more generalised.
>>>
>>>The problem now is that the cmp protocol has no way to
>>>indic
Hi
This website can help you to find any links about computer you want:
http://lxlinks.ati-net.net/
Enjoy
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Mapisto wrote:
> Ok, I've understood my mistake.
>
> Now, my list contains a shared entry of an empty object. When an entry
> is needed to be changed, I check if the entry is the shared empty
> object; in that case I create a new unique instance. If the entry is
> already a unique instance, I use
Mapisto wrote:
> Ok, I've understood my mistake.
>
> Now, my list contains a shared entry of an empty object. When an entry
> is needed to be changed, I check if the entry is the shared empty
> object; in that case I create a new unique instance. If the entry is
> already a unique instance, I use
In Unix, you generally can't affect the environment of your parent program (in
a broad sense, which includes environment variables, current working directory,
opened files, effective user ID, etc).
You have two basic choices to achieve an effect like this. First, you can
start a subshell with the
Thanks Jeff and the crazy 88.
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Steve Holden wrote:
> Do note, though, that if you aren't using some means (threading,
> forking, etc) of handling the connections asynchronously then your
> server will normally only queue a very limited number of connections
> (usually 5 at most).
The example given by the original poster seeme
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
bruno modulix <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Bryan wrote:
>> Amol Vaidya wrote:
>>
>>> Hi. I am interested in learning a new programming language, and have
>>> been debating whether to learn Ruby or Python.
>(snip)
>>
>> why don't you do what i did? download ruby a
In comp.lang.perl.misc Roedy Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 03:15:03 -0700, "David Schwartz"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote or quoted :
>>Did I say their obligation was to secure their shareholders as much
>>profit as possible? I said their obligation was to their shareh
Hi to all,
Can someone give me lights on how can I deal with dlls from python?
My main purpose is to get access to a Unitech PT600 Bar Code system. I
have the dll that works fine through Visual Basic. But I'm migrating to
Python, so I need a way to use the same dll, or a C library.
I tried to ac
[Daniel]
> I tried the ctypes module.
ctypes is the right way to do it. You need to post your code and whatever
errors you received. Here's an example of using ctypes to call a DLL:
>>> from ctypes import *
>>> windll.user32.MessageBoxA(None, "Hello world", "ctypes", 0);
You use "windll" for
Hi everyone,
I have tried to do some googling before asking my question here, but I
haven't found any suitable answer. I am developing a Python API for a
graph library written in pure C. The library is doing an awful lot of
math computations, and some of them can take a pretty long time
(depending
Never mind, problem solved. The other problem I was having was I forgot
to put the .so at the end of a file, so it didn't change anything.
Thanks for all of the help!
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On Thu, 20 Oct 2005 13:17:14 +, axel wrote:
> Employees have *no* obligations towards the shareholders of a company.
> They are not employed or paid by the shareholders, they are employed
> by the company itself which is a separate legal entity.
>
> It is a different matter for the board of d
Ben Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Joe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I'm trying to extract part of html code from a tag to a tag
> For tag soup, use BeautifulSoup:
> http://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/>
Except he's trying to extract an apparently random part of the
file. Beaut
On Oct 20, 2005, at 2:19 AM, Steve Holden wrote:
> Jason Stitt wrote:
>> Using // for 'in' looks really weird, too. It's too bad you can't
>> overload Python's 'in' operator. (Can you? It seems to be hard-coded
>> to iterate through an iterable and look for the value, rather than
>> calling a pri
I get a 404 - as Linux and MacOs-User, I'm pretty ignorant of
Viruses/Malware. So, I'm not sure but I think it's possible that this
site is spreading such malicious content.
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No you can't convert using str(). Binary data is
stored in a Python string object, but it isn't really
a string. It is rather just a bunch of bits packed
into a string variable. struct.unpack() will unpack
those bits into any number of different types of
variables and is what you need.
Example:
On 20 Oct 2005 01:58:44 -0700, the_crazy88 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just use
> os.system("export PYTHONPATH = %s" %("your_pythonpath"))
... except it won't work: os.system will execute the command in a new process,
so the environment variable change will only be visible in *this* process.
S
"Séb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi everybody,
>
> Thanks for the time taken to answer my question. Unfortunatly, it seems
> that there's a little confusion about what I want to do.
>
> In fact, I don't want to search for a particular path between
> computers. What I really want is to detect se
If you want you can also take a look at something I wrote a while
ago (before ctypes was really well known). It has worked for me
with .DLLS form Castelle and Expervision that both have extensive
APIs. It is located here:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/146847
Larry Bate
On 2005-10-20, the_crazy88 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> os.system("export PYTHONPATH = %s" %("your_pythonpath"))
No, that won't work.
That will set the environment variable in the shell spawned by
the os.system command. That shell will then immediately exit,
leaving the caller's environment u
On 2005-10-20, Christian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How do I export an environment variable in a .py script?
http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/os-procinfo.html#l2h-1548
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! My BIOLOGICAL ALARM
at
or
[...]
def method(self):
assert not "must be overrided"
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Kenneth McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'd have to agree with this. Unfortunately, the only way to use Swing
> (in a
> reasonable manner) from Python is to use Jython, and Jython has other
> shortcomings that make me not want to use it.
What shortcomings?
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James wrote:
> Doesn't work for classes because self has no global reference.
True. To make it work one would need to track instances and names and
do comparisons... and so on. So it's not worth it. ;-)
Cheers,
Ron
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On Oct 19, 2005, at 11:55 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Jason Stitt wrote:
>
>>
>> Using // for 'in' looks really weird, too. It's too bad you can't
>> overload Python's 'in' operator. (Can you? It seems to be hard-coded
>> to iterate through an iterable and look for the value, rather than
>> c
Just wondering about this behaviour, why is it this way?
Python 2.4.2 (#67, Sep 28 2005, 12:41:11) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> object.__setattr__
>>> object.__getattr__
Traceback (most recent call last):
File ""
James Stroud wrote:
> I propose that any time anyone suggests switching to Windows, the reasons for
> such should be explicitly described, and not left to interpretation.
I propose that any time anyone suggests switching to Linux ...
I propose that any time anyone suggests switching to Mac ...
I
I am looking for the best and efficient way to replace the first word
in a str, like this:
"aa to become" -> "/aa/ to become"
I know I can use spilt and than join them
but I can also use regular expressions
and I sure there is a lot ways, but I need realy efficient one
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##I'm sorry to stir up such a well discussed topic yet again, but namespaces
are a point of confusion to me...
I took the effort of organizing my Python code (scripting a cad program
calles Rhino) in well defined classes, which would be a terrific thing if I
didn't got stuck in namespace issues.
I've made a comparison of the relative popularity of blogging tools
used by python programmers. I was surprised by the number of python
developers not using python for their blogs; isn't that like GM
employees driving Toyota cars?
See my post at:
http://midtoad.homelinux.org/wp/?p=117
S
--
htt
What languages do you know already?
What computer science concepts do you know?
What computer programming concepts do you know?
Have you heard of Scheme?
Ruby is a bit Perl like -- so if you like Perl, chances are you might
like Ruby.
Python is more like Java.
I have heard, but have not bee
for new style classes __getattribute__ is defined, see eg.
http://www.python.org/2.2.3/descrintro.html
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Ok, so it turns out that the problem the cherrypy.lib.autoreload module
is having, is that kid imports elementtree and on my machine the
elementtree modules are inside a zip file (.egg). So the "path" to the
elementtree __init__.py file is not a valid OS path because everything
after the .egg file
Hey there,
i have tried about every graphing package for python i can get to work
on my system. gnuplot, pychart, biggles, gdchart, etc.. (cant get
matplot to work)
so far, they all are working ok. I need to make an x y chart for some
data that comes in from sensors at different times durring the d
Rocco Moretti wrote:
> James Stroud wrote:
>
>
>>I propose that any time anyone suggests switching to Windows, the reasons for
>>such should be explicitly described, and not left to interpretation.
>
>
> I propose that any time anyone suggests switching to Linux ...
> I propose that any time a
> The big operator question will be: how will "and" and "or" be
> implemented? This is always a sticking point because of Python's
> short-circuiting behaviors regarding them (the resultant bytecode will
> include a JUMP).
I'm using the Boolean | and & operators for logical groups, eg (a | b |
(b
Thomas Heller wrote:
> Just wondering about this behaviour, why is it this way?
>
> Python 2.4.2 (#67, Sep 28 2005, 12:41:11) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>
object.__setattr__
>
>
>
object.__getattr__
>
>
I just see a database error on your blog, perhaps you should have used
Python instead of PHP? Ok, kidding ;)
Since i can't see your comparison, i have to guess. PHP wins? Would not
surprise me, because PHP+MySQL is the easiest hosting to get.
Wordpress, Textpattern, ... are also much more polished
Uh, no good style to comment myself, sorry. I just found why i could't
see your blog entry. Since i read your message through groups.google.de
i just clicked on the link. Your Google Highlight plugin seems to be
confused about that:
Warning: Unknown modifier '/' in
/var/www/html/wp/wp-content/plug
> >> Using // for 'in' looks really weird, too. It's too bad you can't
> >> overload Python's 'in' operator. (Can you? It seems to be hard-coded
> >> to iterate through an iterable and look for the value, rather than
> >> calling a private method like some other builtins do.)
> >>
> >
> > // was a
Thanks for all your replies.
I guess I've always used .*? as sort of an idiom for a non-greedy
match, but I guess it only works if I specify the end point (which I
didn't in the above case).
e.g. re.search(r'exit: (.*?)$', a)
Thanks for pointing that out!
David
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Hello!
I'm a python n00b!
I've been writing in c++ for a few years so programming's not new to me,
just python that I don't know the syntax!
What I'm trying to do is get an email from an pop3 account, and then search
the email for some CVS data and import that information into MS Access.
I am looking for 2 Software Engineers with a Java / Python / Ruby
background to work for a rapidly growing start-up using Ruby on Rails
in an Agile environment.
The role is paying between £40 - £45k and is based in central London.
Please send your details to grant @ connectionsrecruit.co.uk or
Hi,
there´s a function inside a module. How can these function retrieve
the path+name of his module ? (The path is most important).
That should also work if the module is part of a package.
Thanks in advance
Martin
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I used ctypes. It works really fine with DLLs.
have a lool at http://starship.python.net/crew/theller/ctypes
Martin
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On 2005-10-20, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [...] I need to make an x y chart for some data that comes in
> from sensors at different times durring the day. i need it to
> show the value in the y and the time in the x . no problem so
> far. But what i cannot get to happen is to
I have a list of lists (a grid table) that can have about 15000 - 2
"rows" and 10 "cols", so:
1 [ [ 'aaa', 'vv', 'cc', 23, ... ],
2 [ 'aav', 'vv', 'cc', 45, ... ],
...
15000 [ 'sad', 'ad', 'es', 123, ... ], ]
I need to sort this list, but I need to specify two things: the "column"
Jelle Feringa / EZCT Architecture & Design Research wrote:
> ##I'm sorry to stir up such a well discussed topic yet again, but namespaces
> are a point of confusion to me...
>
> I took the effort of organizing my Python code (scripting a cad program
> calles Rhino) in well defined classes, which w
There is a "gotcha" on this:
How do you define "word"? (e.g. can the
first word be followed by space, comma, period,
or other punctuation or is it always a space).
If it is always a space then this will be pretty
"efficient".
string="aa to become"
firstword, restwords=s.split(' ',1)
newstring="/
One way is to pass the RS object when you instantiate
an instance of srfBase, something like:
class srfBase:
'''Base class inherited by the srf* classes, binding general Rhino
surface functionality to a particular
surface generation method'''
def __init__(self, RS):
self.
how ?
i have tried to use unix timestamps, and i have also tried with
DateTime objects
do i need to use a scale that isn't linear (default in most) ?
how do i putt this off ?
thanks btw.
sk
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How about:
list.sort(key=lambda x: x[3])
Does that work?
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Il 2005-10-20, mku <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto:
> Hi,
>
> thereŽs a function inside a module. How can these function retrieve
> the path+name of his module ? (The path is most important).
> That should also work if the module is part of a package.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~ $ cat > test.py
print __
I would try to live with time scale being fixed and insert
None (or whatever value is used by charting package) for
times where observations were not taken. This will mean that
you have to preprocess your data by determining a time step
step value that will fit your data. If you get 3 observation
mku wrote:
> Hi,
>
> there´s a function inside a module. How can these function retrieve
> the path+name of his module ? (The path is most important).
> That should also work if the module is part of a package.
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> Martin
>
Try the following in the function:
import tra
Il 2005-10-20, Lawrence Oluyede <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto:
> Il 2005-10-20, mku <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto:
>> Hi,
>>
>> thereŽs a function inside a module. How can these function retrieve
>> the path+name of his module ? (The path is most important).
>> That should also work if the modu
Dear Steve & Larry,
Both your methods worked flawless, thanks to both of you!
I have to say Larry's way wins on style points, doens't it?
What an awefull thing to get stuck on something that simple, what a
gorgeous solution, thanks so much!
-Jelle
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