On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 8:19 PM, Ramdas S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> But do not stop at the beginners level, and continue the
> work on branch out and make it special
Right. When MOST of the open source projects are dying/dead, it is
indeed an achievement to _continue_ to maintain/improve a pro
Anand/Kushal,
I hope you guys will feel encouraged to continue with your work. Both are
very decent starts. But do not stop at the beginners level, and continue the
work on branch out and make it special
Ramdas
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 6:24 PM, Anand Chitipothu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> >
> >
Hi Vimal,
The pytailer is really cool stuff, i will try this.
Actually i got another option also, just look at this
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/120686
This is also seems be to fine, let me check both to get a best one.
Thanks for your information.
than
Hi Arivoli,
Theres a dirty trick ;) (by running a command).. If u r on a linux machine u
can use the tail command .. tail -100 would give u the last 100
lines of ..
(or do a seek and read)
or u can try this http://code.google.com/p/pytailer/
Regards,
Vimal
- Original Message
Fr
Hi everybody,
i have a log file which will grow everyday, so the size will be nearly
500MB. i am keep on inserting a line one by one in the file.
so the latest one will be in the bottom. I need to get latest 100
lines(lines from bottom). Any idea how to read lines from bottom in a text
file?
I
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 6:53 PM, vivek khurana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- Anand Balachandran Pillai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>
> > Going by that logic all Java books are futile since
> > the Java API documentation
> > is available.
>
> I think what sree is referring here is the
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 5:48 PM, gnuyoga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> venkata subramanian wrote:
> > Moreover, a documentation does not equate to a book.
> >
> > They serve different purposes, have different presentations.
> >
> > I liked Kushal's presentation a lot ( his writing can be improve
--- Anand Balachandran Pillai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Going by that logic all Java books are futile since
> the Java API documentation
> is available.
I think what sree is referring here is the python
tutorial available under docs.python.org . This
tutorial is full of examples. As for exam
>
> this is interesting. what is that people are looking while learning a
> language ??
>
> I would love to have the following
> - Quick Started Guide
> - Hands On (lots of use cases and examples)
> - Advanced Language use cases
> - Tricks & Techniques - proven ways of solving commons probl
venkata subramanian wrote:
> Moreover, a documentation does not equate to a book.
>
> They serve different purposes, have different presentations.
>
> I liked Kushal's presentation a lot ( his writing can be improved).
>
> Python Books - the more the merrier.
>
> Regards,'
> Venkat
>
this is in
Anand Balachandran Pillai wrote:
> Going by that logic all Java books are futile since the Java API documentation
> is available.
>
> --Anand
>
>
Am not against anyone writing documentaion/howto... its a g8 skill.
really appreciate.
I really dont know how much community can be proud about Java
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 1:48 PM, gnuyoga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Kushal
>
> don't u think this is a futile effort in comparison with docs.python.org
>
> curious to know why u wrote this
because dumb people like me only understand simplified and
example-filled books like the ones brought out
Moreover, a documentation does not equate to a book.
They serve different purposes, have different presentations.
I liked Kushal's presentation a lot ( his writing can be improved).
Python Books - the more the merrier.
Regards,'
Venkat
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 4:27 PM, Ramdas S <[EMAIL PROTECTE
I second Anand. I won't mind 100 Kushals writing 100 *free *books on Python.
I might not read all of them, but then I can recommend all of them to people
who says there is a lack of docs on Python.
I feel we need even more documentation at entry level.
Kushal, good job, Keep the book effort going
On Friday 04 April 2008 01:48:10 pm gnuyoga wrote:
> don't u think this is a futile effort in comparison with
> docs.python.org
> curious to know why u wrote this
Because I found most of the students are not into RTFM much. They like books
with examples just like any other book in the school.
K
Going by that logic all Java books are futile since the Java API documentation
is available.
--Anand
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 1:48 PM, gnuyoga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> don't u think this is a futile effort in comparison with docs.python.org
>
> curious to know why u wrote this
>
> - sree
>
Kushal Das wrote:
Hi,
I am writing a book on Python for newbies. You can see it here
http://kushal.fedorapeople.org/book/
I am looking for feedback. Flowers and stones both are welcome
Kushal
don't u think this is a futile effort in comparison with
docs.python.org
curious to know
On Friday 04 April 2008 12:29:44 pm Sanjaya Kumar Patel wrote:
> While I am going through the book at ease, must appreciate the simple look
> and feel of the site. Curious to know what tools do you use to produce the
> site.
I used Publican , which is a toolchain based on docbook. It used to be
R
> I am writing a book on Python for newbies. You can see it here
>
> http://kushal.fedorapeople.org/book/
>
While I am going through the book at ease, must appreciate the simple look and
feel of the site. Curious to know what tools do you use to produce the site.
Sanjay
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