<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi guys,
> this is my first post. my "programming" background is perlish scripting
> and now I am learning python. I need to create a dictionary of list
> from a file. Normally in perl I use to do like:
>
> while(){
> @info=spl
Jorgen Grahn wrote:
> On Mon, 02 Oct 2006 16:36:24 +0100, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Jorgen Grahn wrote:
>>
>>>On 1 Oct 2006 10:18:59 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
and I wish to add my findings to the post, to prevent others from
takin
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> Edward K. Ream wrote:
>
> > Hi. Presumably this is a easy question, but anyone who understands the
> > sax docs thinks completely differently than I do :-)
> >
> >
> >
> > Following the usual cookbook examples, my app parses an open file as
> > follows::
> >
> >
> >
> >
Paul Rubin wrote:
> "John Machin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > So why haven't you been campaigning for regular expression support for
> > sequences of int, and for various array.array subtypes?
>
> regexps work on byte arrays.
But not on other integer subtypes. If regexps should not be restric
Jorgen Grahn wrote:
> - infinite xrange()s
Fun. How about in-memory objects which use no memory, and
self-referential anonymous functions, and object states without
objects...
Regards,
Jordan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Giovanni> In fact, are you absolutely positive that you need so much
Giovanni> effort to maintain an existing bugtracker installation?
The development group's experience with SF and I think to a lesser extent,
Roundup in its early days, and more generally with other components of the
deve
"Jorgen Grahn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> - the black hole function 'def f(*args): pass'
> - the identity function 'def f(x): return x'
>
Also not so farfetched.
See the disable and enable decorators at
http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonDecoratorLibrary#head-8
Istvan> I think you are missing the point. Switching to a different
Istvan> tracker is not such a big deal. Having a really good tracker is
Istvan> a big deal.
No, actually switching trackers can be one big pain in the ass. You
probably aren't aware of how hard it's been for the Pyth
John Machin wrote:
> Many things might cause an error dialogue -- further info needed.
Thanks, I will try your suggestions when I get home. As far as I know,
this only started happening yesterday (although maybe I haven't opened
the files in a day or two). All I've installed/uninstalled since t
On Wed, 04 Oct 2006 10:33:55 +0200, Hendrik van Rooyen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I get the following:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/Controller/lib> python display.py
> UpdateStringProc should not be invoked for type font
> Aborted
>
> and I am back at the bash prompt - this is most frustrat
Bernard wrote:
> Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> > At Monday 2/10/2006 13:05, Bernard wrote:
> >
> > > > > Has anyone tried what I'm doing? and if you tried how have you
> > > > > succeeded getting the data back after the post action?
> >
> > Use a packet sniffer or something to look at an actual POST
Happily, the workaround is easy. Replace theFile with:
# Use cStringIo to avoid a crash in sax when inputFileName has unicode
characters.
s = theFile.read()
theFile = cStringIO.StringIO(s)
My first attempt at a workaround was to use:
s = theFile.read()
parser.parseString(s)
but the expat pars
Jean-Paul Calderone wrote:
> On Wed, 04 Oct 2006 11:00:28 -0400, Leif K-Brooks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>>Jorgen Grahn wrote:
>>> - infinite xrange()s
>>
>>itertools.count()?
>
> Not quite:
>
> >>> import sys, itertools
> >>> c = itertools.count(sys.maxint)
> >>> c.next()
> 2
Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You should get some clue about the number conversion (not to menion a
> bunch of code you can lift :) from
>
> http://www.python.org/pycon/dc2004/papers/42/ex1-C/num2eng.py
For some reason I felt like writing another one, that doesn't use as
much re
Is it expected for access to set elements to be much
slower than access to list elements? Explanation?
Thanks,
Alan Isaac
>>> t1=timeit.Timer("for i in set(xrange(1)):pass","")
>>> t2=timeit.Timer("for i in list(xrange(1)):pass","")
>>> t1.timeit(1000)
9.806250235714316
>>> t2.timeit(1000
"John Machin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> But not on other integer subtypes. If regexps should not be restricted
> to text, they should work on domains whose number of symbols is greater
> than 256, shouldn't they?
I think the underlying regexp C library isn't written that way. I can
see reason
Edward K. Ream wrote:
>> [The value of the encoding field] _could_ be retained, but for what
>> purpose?
>
> I'm asking this question because my app needs it :-)
> Imo, there is *no*
> information in any xml file that can be considered irrelvant.
It sure is! The encoding _is_ irrelevant, in
Jorgen Grahn wrote:
> I have been craving for some similar things for a while, and I'm still not
> sure if they are good ideas, or brain damage caused by studying functional
> programming at Uni.
This is a self correcting situation, as ayone who understands why they
need this can surely write th
SpreadTooThin wrote:
> the =() syntax indicates what?
No special syntax, just an empty tuple as a default parameter.
In this case I could have used an empty list, too, but I thought I'd spare
you the dangers of mutable default values as explained here:
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general/#id53
At Wednesday 4/10/2006 01:32, John Salerno wrote:
> I tried opening my Python chm docs just now, as well as the one for
> wxPython, and both are giving me an error dialog when I double-click
> them and I can't open them. This happened apparently for no reason, just
> today. I even reset but that
On Wed, 04 Oct 2006 16:02:56 GMT
"David Isaac" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is it expected for access to set elements to be much
> slower than access to list elements? Explanation?
> Thanks,
> Alan Isaac
>
> >>> t1=timeit.Timer("for i in set(xrange(1)):pass","")
> >>> t2=timeit.Timer("for i
"David Isaac" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Is it expected for access to set elements to be much
> slower than access to list elements? Explanation?
> Thanks,
> Alan Isaac
>
t1=timeit.Timer("for i in set(xrange(1)):pass","")
t2=timeit.Timer("for i in
> Alan Isaac wrote:
> > The current situation is: use a loop because the obvious generator
> > approach is not efficient.
"Fredrik Lundh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "not efficient" compared to what ?
I already guess that I've missed your point, but to prove it
> The encoding _is_ irrelevant, in the very moment you get unicode strings.
We shall have to disagree about this. My use case is perfectly reasonable,
imo.
> If you write out xml again, use whatever encoding suits you best.
What suits me best is what the *user* specified, and that got put in t
How does one attach files to emails using libgmail? The following code
http://pramode.net/articles/lfy/fuse/4.txt
works fine when said files are simple text files, but it failes as soon as
the files are wild binary files, even attaching the source of an email in a
text file (.eml files) failes.
Mark Elston wrote:
> * Kent Johnson wrote (on 9/30/2006 2:04 PM):
>> John Salerno wrote:
>>> So my question in general is, is it a good idea to default to an OOP
>>> design like my second example when you aren't even sure you will need
>>> it? I know it won't hurt, and is probably smart to do som
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Wed, 04 Oct 2006 15:55:11 GMT, John Salerno
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>> the files in a day or two). All I've installed/uninstalled since then
>> was HTML Kit. I'm not on a network, it's just me. I redownloaded the chm
>> f
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> At Wednesday 4/10/2006 01:32, John Salerno wrote:
>
>> > I tried opening my Python chm docs just now, as well as the one for
>> > wxPython, and both are giving me an error dialog when I double-click
>> > them and I can't open them. This happened apparently for no reason,
Paolo Pantaleo wrote:
> I have this code
>
> from Tkinter import *
>
> root=Tk()
> Button(root).pack(fill=BOTH)
> root.mainloop()
>
> I would expect the button filling all the client draw area of the
> Frame, but when I resize the root window the button becomes wider, but
> not higher ( I get some
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Giovanni> In fact, are you absolutely positive that you need so
> much Giovanni> effort to maintain an existing bugtracker
> installation?
>
> The development group's experience with SF and I think to a lesser
> extent, Roundup in its early days, and more general
Kent Johnson wrote:
>> There is certainly a *lot* of 'Gratuitous OOP' (GOOP?) out there.
>
> In my experience a lot of GOOP results
LOL. Good thing we didn't go with the acronym from my phrase "preemptive
OOP" ;)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Steve Holden wrote:
> No, I'm not on the infrastructure list, but I know that capable people
> *are*: and you know I am quite capable of donating my time to the
> cause, when I have it to spare (and sometimes even when I don't).
>
> Perhaps what I *should* have written was "Sadly *many* people spe
Paul M. wrote:
> Random access to item in list/set when item exists
> set -> 0.000241650824337
> list -> 0.0245168031132
>
> Random access to item in list/set when item does not exist
> set -> 0.000187733357172
> list -> 0.522086186932
OK, that's a much better set of answers
including to questi
Hi all,
I have a question about traversing file systems, and could use some
help. Because of directories with many files in them, os.walk appears
to be rather slow. I`m thinking there is a potential for speed-up since
I don`t need os.walk to report filenames of all the files in every
directory it v
"Edward K. Ream" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Can anyone tell me how the content handler can determine the encoding of the
> file? Can sax provide this info?
Try this:
from xml.parsers import expat
s = """
Title
Chapter 1
"""
class MyParser(object):
def XmlDecl(self, version, encodin
On 2006-10-04, David Isaac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Paul M. wrote:
>> Random access to item in list/set when item exists
>> set -> 0.000241650824337
>> list -> 0.0245168031132
>>
>> Random access to item in list/set when item does not exist
>> set -> 0.000187733357172
>> list -> 0.52208618693
sturlamolden wrote:
> Travis E. Oliphant wrote:
>
> > Definitely not true. People in Singapore, Japan, Ghana, South Africa,
> > France, Germany, New Zealand, Australia, and many other countries are
> > using NumPy successfully. Gratefully, a few have contributed by buying
> > the book, but a lot
John Roth:
> The iter() builtin creates an iterator for any
> object that obeys the sequence protocol.
> Since strings obey the sequence protocol there
> is no real advantage to adding yet another
> protocol to an already very fat object.
Okay!
> This does, however, mean that testing
> for the
Edward K. Ream wrote:
> What suits me best is what the *user* specified, and that got put in the
> first xml line.
> I'm going to have to parse this line myself.
Please consider adding some elements to the document itself that
describe the desired output format, such as:
...
utf-8
...
Thi
Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I just read this mail by Brett Cannon:
> http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-October/069139.html
> where the "PSF infrastracture committee", after weeks of evaluation,
> recommends
> using a non open source tracker (called JIRA - never heard before o
* Kent Johnson wrote (on 10/4/2006 10:04 AM):
> Mark Elston wrote:
>> ...
>> Without this prior planning, any expansion (not to mention bug fixing)
>> becomes more difficult and makes the resulting code more brittle. While
>> not all planning for the future requires OO, this is one mechanism that
* John Salerno wrote (on 10/4/2006 10:18 AM):
> Kent Johnson wrote:
>
>>> There is certainly a *lot* of 'Gratuitous OOP' (GOOP?) out there.
>>
>> In my experience a lot of GOOP results
>
> LOL. Good thing we didn't go with the acronym from my phrase "preemptive
> OOP" ;)
Oops. I couldn't res
Travis E. Oliphant wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > - I guess I should just buy the documentation. I don't like this idea,
> > because I think it's counter-productive to the project to have payware
> > docs (would Python be successful if you had to buy the documentation? I
> > don't think so)
Bruce wrote:
> Hi all,
> I have a question about traversing file systems, and could use some
> help. Because of directories with many files in them, os.walk appears
> to be rather slow.
Provide more info/code. I suspect it is not os.walk itself that is slow,
but rather the code that processes its
On 04 Oct 2006 06:44:24 -0700,
Paul Rubin <> wrote:
> Right now there is not even agreement on what the goal is.
The goal is a new tracker for python.org that the developers like
better; the original call lists 3 reasons (bad interface; lack of
reliability; lack of workflow controls).
"Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Look at the code again. It's not testing what it says it's
> testing.
>
It isnt?
The only quibble I can see is that there really is no "first" element in a
set. I picked the "0 in set" and "0 in list" to pick the fa
"David Isaac" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Paul M. wrote:
>> Random access to item in list/set when item exists
>> set -> 0.000241650824337
>> list -> 0.0245168031132
>>
>> Random access to item in list/set when item does not exist
>> set -> 0.000187733357172
>>
Paul Rubin:
> I think the underlying regexp C library isn't written that way. I can
> see reasons to want a higher-level regexp library that works on
> arbitrary sequences, calling a user-supplied function to classify
> sequence elements, the way current regexps use the character code to
> classif
dan_roman wrote:
> Hi,
> I developed a script with a nice interface in Tkinter that allows me to
> edit some formulas and to generate an Excel worksheet with VBA macros
> within it. The script runs perfectlly in Office 2000, but in Office
> 2003 crash at line: "wbc = workbook.VBProject.VBComponents
"Eric Brunel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 04 Oct 2006 10:33:55 +0200, Hendrik van Rooyen
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I get the following:
> >
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/Controller/lib> python display.py
> > UpdateStringProc should not be invoked for type font
> > Aborte
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Hendrik van Rooyen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I get the following:
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/Controller/lib> python display.py
>UpdateStringProc should not be invoked for type font
>Aborted
>...
>Everything seems to work fine. - there is a thread that runs t
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > I think the underlying regexp C library isn't written that way. I can
> > see reasons to want a higher-level regexp library that works on
> > arbitrary sequences, calling a user-supplied function to classify
> > sequence elements, the way current regexps use the chara
Hi all.
I just started looking at Python's ctypes lib and I am having trouble
using it for a function.
For starters, here's my Python code:
from ctypes import*;
myStringDLL= cdll.LoadLibrary("myStringDLL.dll");
GetMyString = getattr(myStringDLL,
"?GetMyString@@[EMAIL PROTECTED]@[EMAIL PROTECTE
On 4 Oct 2006 11:18:16 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> I just started looking at Python's ctypes lib and I am having trouble
> using it for a function.
>
> For starters, here's my Python code:
>
>
> from ctypes import*;
> myStringDLL= cdll.LoadLibrary("myStringDLL.
Would you have any example of a wrapper for such data types?
Thanks.
Chris Mellon wrote:
> On 4 Oct 2006 11:18:16 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi all.
> >
> > I just started looking at Python's ctypes lib and I am having trouble
> > using it for a function.
> >
> > For
On 4 Oct 2006 11:35:11 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Would you have any example of a wrapper for such data types?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Chris Mellon wrote:
> > On 4 Oct 2006 11:18:16 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Hi all.
> > >
> > > I just started loo
Hi Chris.
I know that it is easy to fix the problem using C++. However, I do not
want to code a wrapper DLL. I was wondering if there was a workaround
with Python. Everything has to be done in Python as we do not have the
tools for C++ (and we are not planning on getting any).
Thanks.
Chris Me
"Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> By contrast, a set (and also the keys in a dict) use a tree structure
> to index more quickly into the list of items
'dict' and I believe also 'set' use a hash table, not a tree structure.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2006-10-04, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> Look at the code again. It's not testing what it says it's
>> testing.
>
> It isnt?
>
> The only quibble I can see is that there really is no "first"
> element
Giovanni Bajo wrote:
>
> The current request is: "please, readers of python-dev, setup a team of 6-10
> people to handle roundup or we'll go to a non-free software for bug
> tracking".
Actually, it would appear that the request goes out to
comp.lang.python/python-list as well (ie. the ungrateful p
David Isaac wrote:
> Paul M. wrote:
> > Random access to item in list/set when item exists
> > set -> 0.000241650824337
> > list -> 0.0245168031132
> >
> > Random access to item in list/set when item does not exist
> > set -> 0.000187733357172
> > list -> 0.522086186932
>
>
> OK, that's a much be
Bruce wrote:
> Hi all,
> I have a question about traversing file systems, and could use some
> help. Because of directories with many files in them, os.walk appears
> to be rather slow. I`m thinking there is a potential for speed-up since
> I don`t need os.walk to report filenames of all the files
Edward K. Ream wrote:
> I'm asking this question because my app needs it :-) Imo, there is *no*
> information in any xml file that can be considered irrelvant.
the encoding isn't *in* the XML file, it's an artifact of the
serialization model used for a specific XML infoset. the XML
data is pu
Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> The current request is: "please, readers of python-dev, setup a team of 6-10
> people to handle roundup or we'll go to a non-free software for bug
> tracking". This is something which I cannot cope with, and I'm *speaking*
> up against. Were the request lowered to something m
"Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On 2006-10-04, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> "Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>
> It seems to be timing "testing for membership", not "random
> access". Random
Edward K. Ream wrote:
> What suits me best is what the *user* specified, and that got put in the
> first xml line.
are you expecting your users to write XML by hand? ouch.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello everybody,
is there a way to receive the name of an object passed to a function
from within the function.
something like
def foo(param):
print theNameOfTheVariablePassedToParam
var1 = "hello"
var2 = "world"
>>> foo(var1)
var1
>>> foo(var2)
var2
thanks in advance,
greets
An
"Duncan Booth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> "Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> By contrast, a set (and also the keys in a dict) use a tree structure
>> to index more quickly into the list of items
>
> 'dict' and I believe also 'set' use a hash table, no
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> No, actually switching trackers can be one big pain in the ass. You
> probably aren't aware of how hard it's been for the Python development team
> (I think Martin v. Loewis, mostly) to get tracker data out of SF.
http://effbot.org/zone/sandbox-sourceforge.htm
--
h
John Machin wrote:
> But not on other integer subtypes. If regexps should not be restricted
> to text, they should work on domains whose number of symbols is greater
> than 256, shouldn't they?
they do:
import re, array
data = [0, 1, 1, 2]
array_type = "IH"[re.sre_compile.MAXCODE == 0x]
a
I'm just building a Python CGI Tutorial and would appreciate any
feedback from the many experts in this list.
Regards, Clodoaldo Pinto Neto
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> I'm just building a Python CGI Tutorial and would appreciate
> any feedback from the many experts in this list.
First item of feedback...post something on which to give
feedback, such as a link to the work in progress. :)
-tkc
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Andreas Huesgen wrote:
> is there a way to receive the name of an object passed to a function
> from within the function.
objects don't have names, so in general, you cannot do that. see:
http://pyfaq.infogami.com/how-can-my-code-discover-the-name-of-an-object
--
http://mail.python.org/mai
>> No, actually switching trackers can be one big pain in the ass. You
>> probably aren't aware of how hard it's been for the Python
>> development team (I think Martin v. Loewis, mostly) to get tracker
>> data out of SF.
Fredrik> http://effbot.org/zone/sandbox-sourceforge.ht
Giovanni Bajo schrieb:
>>> I hope this
>>> recommendation from the "PSF infrastructure committee" is rejected.
>> That is very very unlikely. Who would reject it, and why?
>
> The community, and I am impressed you do not want to understand the "why".
How would "the community" actually reject it?
Clodoaldo Pinto Neto wrote:
> I'm just building a Python CGI Tutorial and would appreciate any
> feedback from the many experts in this list.
http://webpython.codepoint.net
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Clodoaldo Pinto Neto wrote:
> I'm just building a Python CGI Tutorial and would appreciate any
> feedback from the many experts in this list.
http://webpython.codepoint.net
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> are you expecting your users to write XML by hand?
Of course not. Leo has the following option:
@string new_leo_file_encoding = utf-8
Edward
Edward K. Ream email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leo: http://webpages.charter.net/edreaml
Giovanni Bajo schrieb:
> In fact, are you absolutely positive that you need so much effort to
> maintain an existing bugtracker installation? I know for sure that GCC's
> Bugzilla installation is pretty much on its own; Daniel Berlin does some
> maintainance every once in a while (upgrading when ne
> Please consider adding some elements to the document itself that
describe the desired output format,
Well, that's what the encoding field in the xml line was supposed to do.
Not a bad idea though, except it changes the file format, and I would really
rather not do that.
Edward
---
> the encoding isn't *in* the XML file, it's an artifact of the
> serialization model used for a specific XML infoset. the XML
> data is pure Unicode.
Sorry, but no. The *file* is what I am talking about, and the way it is
encoded does, in fact, really make a difference to some users. They ha
Giovanni Bajo schrieb:
> Frankly, I don't give a damn about the language the application is coded in
That's probably one of the reasons why you aren't a member of the Python
Software Foundation. Its mission includes to publicize, promote the
adoption of, and facilitate the ongoing development of P
Algol, anyone?
Andreas Huesgen wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> is there a way to receive the name of an object passed to a function
> from within the function.
>
> something like
>
> def foo(param):
> print theNameOfTheVariablePassedToParam
>
> var1 = "hello"
> var2 = "world"
>
> >>> foo(var
A simple RE engine written in Python can be short, this is a toy:
http://paste.lisp.org/display/24849
If you can't live without the usual syntax:
http://paste.lisp.org/display/24872
Paul Rubin:
> Yes, I want something like that all the time for file scanning without
> having to resort to parser mo
limodou wrote:
> here is my program
>
> d = {}
> for line in file('test.txt'):
> line = line.strip()
> if line:
> k, v = line.strip().split()
> d.setdefault(k, []).append(v)
> print d
Minor nits: you call strip twice, when you don't need to. just omit
the second call.
Also
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A set, on the other hand, uses a hash table so finding an element
> takes constant time (it's one hash lookup, independent of the size of
> the set)--and determining an item isn't there is likewise constant
> time.
>
One hash calculation, but ther
>> I'm just building a Python CGI Tutorial and would appreciate any
>> feedback from the many experts in this list.
>
> http://webpython.codepoint.net
Thanks! :)
My first note would be regarding
http://webpython.codepoint.net/shell_commands
The code is very dangerous...allowing any ol' schmoe
As a complete novice in the study of Python, I am asking myself where this
language is superior or better suited than others. For example, all I see in
the tutorials are lots of examples of list processing, arithmetic
calculations - all in a DOS-like environment.
What is particularly disappoint
Harry George schrieb:
> I'm not on the infrastructure list either. But I wonder why it is
> "Roundup or else non-python COTS"? I gave up on Roundup a while ago
> due to too many crashes. I'm now using Trac:
>
> a) Open Source
> b) Python
> c) Adequate functionality (for me at least)
>
> http:/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all.
>
> I just started looking at Python's ctypes lib and I am having trouble
> using it for a function.
[...]
> #C++ Prototype of the function I want to call:
ctypes provides support for calling functions in C libraries, using C
datatypes. I don't see any reason t
"Martin v. Löwis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You fail to recognize that Python is *already* using a non-free software
> for bug tracking, as do thousands of other projects.
I don't think that reflects an explicit decision. SF started out as
free software and the software became nonfree after
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
> No, actually switching trackers can be one big pain in the ass. You
> probably aren't aware of how hard it's been for the Python development team
> (I think Martin v. Loewis, mostly) to get tracker data out of SF. An
> explicit requirement was that any tool chosen as
> Try this:
[snip]
Parser.XmlDeclHandler = self.XmlDecl
[snip]
Excellent! Thanks so much.
Edward
Edward K. Ream email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Leo: http://webpages.charter.net/edreamleo/front.html
-
gord wrote:
> What is particularly disappointing is the absence of a Windows IDE,
> components and an event driven paradigm. How does Python stand relative to
> the big 3, namely Visual C++, Visual Basic and Delphi?
if you think those are the "big 3", you should perhaps start by asking
yoursel
Paul Boddie schrieb:
> Out of interest, here are some figures:
>
> KDE: 12983 bugs and 11656 wishes
> GNOME: 23624 reports
> Python: 7159 bugs, 3843 patches, 477 feature requests
>
> The Python figures are totals, whereas I can't be sure whether the KDE
> and GNOME figures merely refer to t
Dave Opstad wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>I am trying to create a semi-standalone with the vendor python on OS X
>>10.4 (python 2.3.5). I tried to include some packages with both
>>--packages from the command and the 'packages' option in set
Fredrik Lundh schrieb:
> Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>
>> Filenames are expected to be bytestrings. So what happens is that the
>> unicode string you pass as filename gets implicitly converted using the
>> default encoding.
>
> it is ?
Yes. While you can pass Unicode strings as file names to many Py
gord wrote:
> As a complete novice in the study of Python, I am asking myself where this
> language is superior or better suited than others. For example, all I see in
> the tutorials are lots of examples of list processing, arithmetic
> calculations - all in a DOS-like environment.
>
> What is
Edward K. Ream schrieb:
> Happily, the workaround is easy. Replace theFile with:
>
> # Use cStringIo to avoid a crash in sax when inputFileName has unicode
> characters.
> s = theFile.read()
> theFile = cStringIO.StringIO(s)
>
> My first attempt at a workaround was to use:
>
> s = theFile.read
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Travis E. Oliphant wrote:
>
>
> Given the quality of python's (free) documentation and how good it's
> been for a very long time, it's bit ironic to be using the phrase
> "normal open-source documentation" on this mailing list. Numeric
> python, which numpy aspires to b
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