On Jun 13, 6:19 am, Steven D'Aprano 〔steve
+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info〕 wrote:
│ I don't know if there are any studies that indicate how much of a
│ programmer's work is actual mechanical typing but I'd be surprised
if it
│ were as much as 20% of the work day. The rest of the time being
thinki
Ba Wha 13, 7:23 nz, Ehfgbz Zbql 〔ehfgbzcz...@tznvy.pbz〕 jebgr:
│ Qibenx -- yvxr djregl naq nal bgure xrlobneq ynlbhg -- nffhzrf gur
│ pbzchgre vf n glcrjevgre.
│ Guvf zrnaf va rssrpg ng yrnfg gjb pbafgenvagf, arprffnel sbe gur
│ glcrjevgre ohg abg sbe gur pbzchgre:
│
│ n. Gur glcvfg pna glcr bayl
Thanks. This works. :)
Regards,
Sherjil Ozair
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
for some reason, was unable to post the previous message. (but can
post others) So, the message is rot13'd and it works. Not sure what's
up with Google groups. (this happened a few years back once.
Apparantly, the message content might have something to do with it
because rot13 clearly works. Yet,
what is a .raw file, do you mean a flat binary?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
My program polls FTP servers at intervals for jobs to process.
Its running as a service on Windows server 2000 or 2003 :-(.
About 13% of times the retrbinary and less often the nlst calls would fail
with
"Software caused connection abort".
I could find no relevant solution on the intertubes.
I a
On 14/06/2011 07:31, Chris Angelico wrote:
But if anyone feels like writing an incompatible browser, please can
you add Python scripting?
You might find that Pyjamas already fill your needs python/javascript
wise. It is truly great to just write python, translate it, and then
have it work in
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 6:39 PM, Martin P. Hellwig
wrote:
> On 14/06/2011 07:31, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
>>
>> But if anyone feels like writing an incompatible browser, please can
>> you add Python scripting?
>
> You might find that Pyjamas already fill your needs python/javascript wise.
> It is
Hi.
Recently i needed some code to be able to listen on the public IP
address outside my modem router. Eventually, i came up with a
minimal UPnP implementation and because it seems to work and i'm
happy about it, i've decided to post it here at clpy in case
anybody else may have a use for it. You
[Originally drafted by Gabriel Genellina.]
QOTW: "Well, it's incompatible with the Python compiler I keep in my
head. Have
these developers no consideration for backward-thinking-
compatibility?"
(Ben Finney, 2011-06-10, on certain old but not-so-obvious change)
Python versions 2.7.2 and 3
Hi all,
I've always done key creation/incrementation using:
if key in dict:
dict[key] += 1
else:
dict[key] = 1
Today I spotted an alternative:
dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
Whilst certainly more compact, I'd be interested in views on how
pythonesque this method is.
--
http://mail.p
Hi all,
I am trying to look at the source code of a python script (run.py). But
it reads
###code - run.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
# EASY-INSTALL-SCRIPT: 'pbpy==0.1','run.py'
__requires__ = 'pbpy==0.1'
import pkg_resources
pkg_resources.run_script('pbpy==0.1', 'run
Steve Crook wrote:
> I've always done key creation/incrementation using:
>
> if key in dict:
> dict[key] += 1
> else:
> dict[key] = 1
Your way is usually faster than
> dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
>
> Whilst certainly more compact, I'd be interested in views on how
> pythonesque t
On 13 Giu, 11:22, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 6:42 PM, Yang Ha Nguyen wrote:
>
> > Could you show which studies? Do they do research just about habit or
> > other elements (e.g. movement rates, comfortablility, ...) as well?
> > Have they ever heard of RSI because of repetiti
On Jun 14, 12:16 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> Steve Crook wrote:
> > I've always done key creation/incrementation using:
>
> > if key in dict:
> > dict[key] += 1
> > else:
> > dict[key] = 1
>
> Your way is usually faster than
>
> > dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
>
> > Whils
CoffeeScript maybe? http://jashkenas.github.com/coffee-script
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 05:37:45 -0700 (PDT), AlienBaby wrote in
Message-Id: <078c5e9a-8fad-4d4c-b081-f69d0f575...@v11g2000prk.googlegroups.com>:
> How do those methods compare to the one I normally use;
>
> try:
> dict[key]+=1
> except:
> dict[key]=1
This is a lot slower in percentage terms. You
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 13:16:47 +0200, Peter Otten wrote in
Message-Id: :
> Your way is usually faster than
>
>> dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
Thanks Peter, ran it through Timeit and you're right. It's probably also
easier to read the conditional version, even if it is longer.
> You may also c
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 10:57:44 +, Steve Crook wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've always done key creation/incrementation using:
>
> if key in dict:
> dict[key] += 1
> else:
> dict[key] = 1
>
> Today I spotted an alternative:
>
> dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
>
> Whilst certainly more comp
Leo 4.9 b4 is now available at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/leo/files/
If you have trouble downloading, please do try an alternate mirror.
Unless serious problems are reported, expect Leo 4.9 rc1 this Friday,
June 17
and 4.9 final on Tuesday, June 21.
Leo is a text editor, data organizer, pro
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 12:53:11 +, Steve Crook wrote:
> On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 05:37:45 -0700 (PDT), AlienBaby wrote in Message-Id:
> <078c5e9a-8fad-4d4c-b081-f69d0f575...@v11g2000prk.googlegroups.com>:
>
>> How do those methods compare to the one I normally use;
>>
>> try:
>> dict[key]+=1
>> exce
- Original Message -
From: "Ethan Furman"
To:
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2011 10:55 PM
Subject: Re: Binding was Re: Function declarations ?
Patty wrote:
So I am wondering if you learned this
in Computer Science or Computer Engineering?, on the job?
I learned it on this list. :)
~E
- Original Message -
From: "Chris Angelico"
To:
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2011 11:31 PM
Subject: Rant on web browsers
Random rant and not very on-topic. Feel free to hit Delete and move on.
I've just spent a day coding in Javascript, and wishing browsers
supported Python instead (or
On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 10:21, Elena wrote:
> On 13 Giu, 06:30, Tim Roberts wrote:
>> Studies have shown that even a
>> strictly alphabetical layout works perfectly well, once the typist is
>> acclimated.
>
> Once the user is acclimated to move her hands much more (about 40%
> more for Qwerty ve
On 13/06/2011 11:55 PM, zainul franciscus wrote:
Iknow you guys must be thinking "Hmm, Miranda, isn't that an IM
application ?"; Yep I hear you, I'll change the name once I get a good
name. I am open for any suggestions.
Actually I was thinking "isn't that a functional programming language?"
M
See more details in my forum post:
http://www.python-forum.org/pythonforum/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=26724
I'm trying to pickle a bunch of functions (mostly built-in) and pickle keeps
giving me errors. I have no Ellipsis in my data at all, and for some reason,
pickle seems to think I do.
Here is a
I have a dict that I would like to print out in a series of columns,
rather than as a bunch of lines. Normally when you do print(dict), the
output will look something like this:
{'Header2': ['2', '5', '8'], 'Header3': ['3', '6', '9'], 'Header1':
['1', '4', '7'], 'Header4': ['10', '11', '12']}
I c
Hi,
Wingware has released version 4.0.3 of Wing IDE, an integrated development
environment designed specifically for the Python programming language.
Wing IDE is a cross-platform Python IDE that provides a professional code
editor with vi, emacs, and other key bindings, auto-completion, call tip
> On Jun 13, 11:55 pm, zainul franciscus wrote:
> I started an open source file organizer called Miranda. Miranda is
> inspired by Belvedere written by Adam Pash of Lifehacker (http://
> lifehacker.com/341950/belvedere-automates-your-self+cleaning-pc). I
> know you guys must be thinking "Hmm, Mir
On 6/14/2011 11:29 AM, Zachary Dziura wrote:
I have a dict that I would like to print out in a series of columns,
rather than as a bunch of lines. Normally when you do print(dict), the
output will look something like this:
{'Header2': ['2', '5', '8'], 'Header3': ['3', '6', '9'], 'Header1':
['1',
On 6/14/2011 3:49 AM, Martin De Kauwe wrote:
what is a .raw file, do you mean a flat binary?
Perhaps tiff-like.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Raw_image_format
"Providing a detailed and concise description of the content of raw
files is highly problematic. There is no single ra
Steve Crook wrote:
> Whilst certainly more compact, I'd be interested in views on how
> pythonesque this method is.
Instead of calling function you could use:
d = {}
d[key] = (key in d and d[key]) + 1
Regards.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 7:54 AM, Matt Chaput wrote:
> On 13/06/2011 11:55 PM, zainul franciscus wrote:
>>
>> Iknow you guys must be thinking "Hmm, Miranda, isn't that an IM
>> application ?"; Yep I hear you, I'll change the name once I get a good
>> name. I am open for any suggestions.
>
> Actuall
> d={'Header2': ['2', '5', '8'], 'Header3': ['3', '6', '9'],
> 'Header1': ['1', '4', '7'], 'Header4': ['10', '11', '12']}
>
> arr = []
> for key,value in d.items():
> line = ['{:>10s}'.format(key)]
> for num in value:
> line.append('{:>10s}'.format(num))
> arr.append(lin
On Mon, 13 Jun 2011 20:55:54 -0700, zainul franciscus wrote:
> I started an open source file organizer called Miranda. Miranda is
> inspired by Belvedere written by Adam Pash of Lifehacker (http://
> lifehacker.com/341950/belvedere-automates-your-self+cleaning-pc). I know
> you guys must be think
On 14-6-2011 2:40, Chris Torek wrote:
>
> Nonetheless, there is something at least slightly suspicious here:
[... snip explanations...]
Many thanks Chris, for the extensive reply. There's some useful knowledge in it.
My idea to call the base class reduce as the default fallback causes the
prob
On 06/14/2011 05:29 PM, Zachary Dziura wrote:
I have a dict that I would like to print out in a series of columns,
rather than as a bunch of lines. Normally when you do print(dict), the
output will look something like this:
{'Header2': ['2', '5', '8'], 'Header3': ['3', '6', '9'], 'Header1':
['1'
hi ,
I trying to use urllib2 in my script , but the problem is lets say a domains
resolves to multiple IPs , If the URL is served by plain http , I can add
“Host: domain” header and check whether all IPs are returning proper responses
or not , but in case of https , I have to trust on my local
On 14/06/2011 18:48, Zach Dziura wrote:
[snip]
I just have one quick question. On the line where you have zip(*arr),
what is the * for? Is it like the pointer operator, such as with C? Or
is it exactly the pointer operator?
[snip]
The * in the argument list of a function call unpacks the follow
Ok, I solved the problem with matplotlib
fileobj = open("hand.raw", 'rb')
data = numpy.fromfile(fileobj,dtype=np.uint16)
data = numpy.reshape(data,(96,470,352))
imshow(data[:,:,40],cmap='gray')
show()
the error was caused by different order of data, however it still
reads the dataset as half of i
On 14/06/2011 21:13, kafooster wrote:
Ok, I solved the problem with matplotlib
fileobj = open("hand.raw", 'rb')
data = numpy.fromfile(fileobj,dtype=np.uint16)
data = numpy.reshape(data,(96,470,352))
imshow(data[:,:,40],cmap='gray')
show()
the error was caused by different order of data, however
In article ,
km wrote:
> I am trying to look at the source code of a python script (run.py). But
> it reads
> ###code - run.py
> #!/usr/bin/env python
> # EASY-INSTALL-SCRIPT: 'pbpy==0.1','run.py'
> __requires__ = 'pbpy==0.1'
> import pkg_resources
> pkg_resour
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 1:26 PM, MRAB wrote:
> On 14/06/2011 21:13, kafooster wrote:
>
>>
>> I would like to visualize this data with PIL, but PIL works only with
>> 8bit data. How could I resample my array from 16bit to 8bit?
>>
>
> Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
> float(
On 14 Cze, 22:26, MRAB wrote:
>
> Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
> float(max_8bit_value) / float(max_16bit_value).
could you please explain it a little? I dont understand it. like
multiplying each element?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 3:33 AM, geremy condra wrote:
>> My suggestion: Cruftbuster
>
> 'Phile'
Or 'Philtre'. A philtre is a very useful thing to have around a
house... just ask Aline Sangazure.
I'd like to join this project, as a tester.
Chris Angelico
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listin
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 12:11 AM, Patty wrote:
> Hi Chris - I am just learning JavaScript and this was helpful to me, not a
> rant. I am reading JavaScript: The Good Parts so he is jumping around in
> topic and I can just use this when learning about dates and ints coming up.
Hehe. Just that it
On 14/06/2011 22:20, kafooster wrote:
On 14 Cze, 22:26, MRAB wrote:
Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
float(max_8bit_value) / float(max_16bit_value).
could you please explain it a little? I dont understand it. like
multiplying each element?
Yes. Something like this:
f
When you want to stop execution of a statement body early, for flow
control, there is a variety ways you can go, depending on the context.
Loops have break and continue. Functions have return. Generators
have yield (which temporarily stops execution). Exceptions sort of
work for everything, but
On 2011.06.13 08:58 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> That's one of the reasons I like my laptop keyboard so much.
I find that the terribly tiny keys on a laptop keyboard make them very
evil. I don't see how anyone could type fast on one of them without
making tons of errors. I constantly have to fix typ
Chris Angelico wrote:
> I've just spent a day coding in Javascript, and wishing browsers
> supported Python instead (or as well). All I needed to do was take two
> dates (as strings), figure out the difference in days, add that many
> days to both dates, and put the results back into DOM Input obj
> The chief geek has given his nod of approval to publish Miranda through
> how-to geek, and I can pitch any of your software to him, and write an
> article about it - provided that the chief geek approve the software.
I wouldn't mind contributing some time to this project.
--
http://mail.python.
On 14/06/2011 23:28, Eric Snow wrote:
[snip]
With modules I sometimes have code at the beginning to do some small
task if a certain condition is met, and otherwise execute the rest of
the module body. Here's my main use case:
"""some module"""
import sys
import importlib
import uti
On Jun 15, 10:43 am, Redcat wrote:
> > The chief geek has given his nod of approval to publish Miranda through
> > how-to geek, and I can pitch any of your software to him, and write an
> > article about it - provided that the chief geek approve the software.
>
> I wouldn't mind contributing some
Hi Chris,
Thank you for the reply. I should have mentioned where I am hosting
the code *doh slap on the wrist.
I am hosting the code in google code:
http://code.google.com/p/mirandafileorganizer/
There is a link to the user/developer guide on how to get started with
the software:
https://docs.g
Hi Chris,
Thank you for the reply. I should have mentioned where I am hosting
the code *doh slap on the wrist.
I am hosting the code in google code:
http://code.google.com/p/mirandafileorganizer/
There is a link to the user/developer guide on how to get started with
the software:
https://docs.g
MRAB wrote:
On 14/06/2011 23:28, Eric Snow wrote:
I would rather have something like this:
"""some module"""
import sys
import importlib
import util # some utility module somewhere...
if __name__ == "__main__":
name = util.get_module_name(sys.modules[__name__])
m
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, kafooster wrote:
On 14 Cze, 22:26, MRAB wrote:
Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
float(max_8bit_value) / float(max_16bit_value).
could you please explain it a little? I dont understand it. like
multiplying each element?
You said in an earlie
Zachary Dziura writes:
> What I want to know is how I can print out that information in a
> column, where the header is the first line of the column, with the
> data following underneath, like so:
I'm glad you got some good replies. It probably reflects badly on me
that my first thought was http
Eric Snow wrote:
With modules I sometimes have code at the beginning to do some small
task if a certain condition is met, and otherwise execute the rest of
the module body. Here's my main use case:
"""some module"""
import sys
import importlib
import util # some utility module somewhe
Ethan Furman wrote:
MRAB wrote:
On 14/06/2011 23:28, Eric Snow wrote:
I would rather have something like this:
"""some module"""
import sys
import importlib
import util # some utility module somewhere...
if __name__ == "__main__":
name = util.get_module_name(sys.module
On 15 Cze, 00:06, MRAB wrote:
>
> Yes. Something like this:
>
> fileobj = open("hand.raw", 'rb')
> data = numpy.fromfile(fileobj, dtype=numpy.uint16)
> fileobj.close()
> data = data * float(0xFF) / float(0x)
> data = numpy.array(data, dtype=numpy.uint8)
> data = data.reshape((96, 470, 352))
>
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 9:40 AM, Ben Finney wrote:
> Zachary Dziura writes:
>
>> What I want to know is how I can print out that information in a
>> column, where the header is the first line of the column, with the
>> data following underneath, like so:
>
> I'm glad you got some good replies. It
On 15 Cze, 01:25, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, kafooster wrote:
>
> > On 14 Cze, 22:26, MRAB wrote:
>
> >> Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
> >> float(max_8bit_value) / float(max_16bit_value).
>
> > could you please explain it a little? I dont understand it
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 12:50 AM, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> And disproportionate usage of fingers. On QWERTY the weakest fingers
> (pinkies) do almost 1/4 of the keypresses when modifier keys, enter,
> tab, and backspace are taken into account.
That's true on a piano too, though. My pinkies are quite
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 8:29 AM, Andrew Berg wrote:
> On 2011.06.13 08:58 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
>> That's one of the reasons I like my laptop keyboard so much.
> I find that the terribly tiny keys on a laptop keyboard make them very
> evil. I don't see how anyone could type fast on one of them
On 15/06/2011 00:59, kafooster wrote:
On 15 Cze, 00:06, MRAB wrote:
Yes. Something like this:
fileobj = open("hand.raw", 'rb')
data = numpy.fromfile(fileobj, dtype=numpy.uint16)
fileobj.close()
data = data * float(0xFF) / float(0x)
data = numpy.array(data, dtype=numpy.uint8)
data = data.
Thank you for the reply. I should have mentioned where I am hosting
the code *doh slap on the wrist.
I am hosting the code in google code:
http://code.google.com/p/mirandafileorganizer/
There is a link to the user/developer guide on how to get started with
the software:
https://docs.google.com/d
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 4:34 AM, saurabh verma wrote:
> hi ,
>
> I trying to use urllib2 in my script , but the problem is lets say a domains
> resolves to multiple IPs , If the URL is served by plain http , I can add
> “Host: domain” header and check whether all IPs are returning proper
> resp
Eric Snow writes:
> When you want to stop execution of a statement body early, for flow
> control, there is a variety ways you can go, depending on the context.
> Loops have break and continue. Functions have return. Generators
> have yield (which temporarily stops execution). Exceptions sort
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 5:51 PM, Erik Max Francis wrote:
> Ethan Furman wrote:
>>
>> To me, too -- too bad it doesn't work:
>>
>> c:\temp>\python32\python early_abort.py
>> File "early_abort.py", line 7
>> return
>> ^
>> SyntaxError: 'return' outside function
>
> Nor should it. There's
On Jun 10, 3:47 am, David <71da...@libero.it> wrote:
> Il Tue, 7 Jun 2011 19:25:43 -0700 (PDT), mud ha scritto:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi All,
>
> > Does anybody know what the following error means with paramiko, and
> > how to fix it.
>
> > I don't know what is causing it and why. I have updated pa
On 2011.06.14 07:18 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> There are many different designs of laptop keyboard. Tiny netbooks
> seem to have the very worst, leaving it nearly impossible to get any
> decent work done (there may be exceptions to that, but I've seen a lot
> of bad netbook keyboards). My current
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 19:25:32 -0400, Dave Angel wrote:
> You said in an earlier message to ignore the RAW format. However, if
> your file matches a typical camera's raw file
It doesn't. He's dealing with a raw array of fixed-size integers (i.e.
what you would get if you took a C array and wrote
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 10:51 AM, Eric Snow wrote:
> if condition_1:
> ...
> return
> if condition_2:
> ...
> return
>
> # now do my expensive module stuff
>
> # finally handle being run as a script
> if __name__ == "__main__":
> ...
>
The best way I can think of is:
Eric Snow writes:
> I apologize if my example was unclear. I kept it pretty simple.
That's a good goal, but unfortunately in this case it means the purpose
is opaque.
> In general it would be nice to do some checks up front and decide
> whether or not to continue executing the module, rather t
On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 13:13:07 -0700, kafooster wrote:
> Ok, I solved the problem with matplotlib
>
> fileobj = open("hand.raw", 'rb')
> data = numpy.fromfile(fileobj,dtype=np.uint16)
> data = numpy.reshape(data,(96,470,352))
> imshow(data[:,:,40],cmap='gray')
> show()
>
> the error was caused by
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, kafooster wrote:
On 15 Cze, 01:25, Dave Angel wrote:
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, kafooster wrote:
On 14 Cze, 22:26, MRABwrote:
Multiply the numpy array by a scaling factor, which is
float(max_8bit_value) / float(max_16bit_value).
could you please explain it
On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 7:33 PM, Ben Finney wrote:
>
> I have never seen code that needs this, and can't imagine why the above
> would be a good design for a module. Is there real code online somewhere
> that we can see which serves as a real example for your use case?
>
Unfortunately not. Most
On 14Jun2011 18:51, Eric Snow wrote:
| On Tue, Jun 14, 2011 at 5:51 PM, Erik Max Francis wrote:
| > Ethan Furman wrote:
| >>
| >> To me, too -- too bad it doesn't work:
| >>
| >> c:\temp>\python32\python early_abort.py
| >> File "early_abort.py", line 7
| >> return
| >> ^
| >> SyntaxErr
On Jun 15, 5:11 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 12:50 AM, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > And disproportionate usage of fingers. On QWERTY the weakest fingers
> > (pinkies) do almost 1/4 of the keypresses when modifier keys, enter,
> > tab, and backspace are taken into account.
>
> Tha
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, Eric Snow wrote:
Unfortunately not. Most of this line of thinking is the result of
looking at import functionality in different ways, including with
regards to the problem of modules getting imported twice (once as
__main__). I've been doing work on multi-file modul
Hello all:
I started working on a project with someone else quite recently, and he
has a request. The project requires an URL shortener, and he would like
it to be dynamic for both users and developers. Apparently some
applications on the mac allow for the user to input some data on a URL
shor
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 2:03 PM, Littlefield, Tyler wrote:
> Hello all:
> I started working on a project with someone else quite recently, and he has
> a request. The project requires an URL shortener, and he would like it to be
> dynamic for both users and developers. Apparently some applications
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 06:00, rusi wrote:
> For keyboarding (in the piano/organ sense) the weakest finger is not
> the fifth/pinky but the fourth.
> Because for the fifth you will notice that the natural movement is to
> stiffen the finger and then use a slight outward arm-swing; for thumb,
> ind
On 6/14/2011 2:37 PM, MRAB wrote:
On 14/06/2011 18:48, Zach Dziura wrote:
[snip]
I just have one quick question. On the line where you have zip(*arr),
what is the * for? Is it like the pointer operator, such as with C? Or
is it exactly the pointer operator?
[snip]
The * in the argument list of
On 15-Jun-2011, at 6:13 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 4:34 AM, saurabh verma wrote:
>> hi ,
>>
>> I trying to use urllib2 in my script , but the problem is lets say a domains
>> resolves to multiple IPs , If the URL is served by plain http , I can add
>> “Host: domain” h
On Wed, Jun 15, 2011 at 4:23 PM, saurabh verma wrote:
> But in the case of https , I can do above because https handshake is based on
> the domain i am trying to connect , so lets say I want to following inside a
> python script using libcurl2 but without touching /etc/hosts ,
>
> curl “https:/
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